LPS to have or avoid

benray4fun

New member
Hi, I'm currently ready for my first lps coral and I'd like to know which corals you guys most prize and which ones to avoid. I don't know much about'm so I have to ask..."thanks for any input".
 
Well, I would avoid elegance coral as they have something wrong with them that causes very poor survival rates in our tanks. They are really nice if you get a healthy one, but that is very rare. Also, avoid galaxia, unless you can place it far away from other corals. They have huge stinger tentacles and even a small one can reach a foot away and hurt other corals.

Start with euphyllia and go from there. Frogspawn, hammer, torch. They are all pretty hardy and look great.
 
Sorry, I forgot to point out that you should also get a book or two on corals to get some more info on the needs of these animals. Eric Borneman has a good one.
 
I agree with the torch, that one is beautiful to the eyes and I don't know anyting about'm yet...lmao Can't say anything about the other two as i know nothing about'm yet...thanks!

Already considerd books, but nothing like other members experiences...
 
Frog and hammer can touch without a problem: makes placement easier.

You're arriving in the area of must-do-tests: alkalinity and calcium must be handled with additives, and I recommend testing daily until you've got a clear picture of what your particular tank does: no two are alike. My 52g, as an example, once it settled out of its initial wildness, evaporates a steady 1 gallon a day, wants 2 tsp of buffer a day [I add that to the topoff water for the 5 day period it lasts] and takes 2 tsp of calcium a day: I hand-add. This keeps it at 420 ca, 9 alk, 8.3 ph, 80 temp, 1.025 salinity, and everything stays happy. If you stay in those parameters you'll have no trouble with lps.

Check them after dark with a flashlight: things like candycane [another easy one] open up with tentacles. Brain, likewise. Stay away from plate for a while: it's touchy. Avoid the elegance: prone to a disease I wouldn't want in my tank. Torch is 'hot' and should not touch anything else, but has a short reach. Galaxia is fun, but has foot long sweepers and has to be put near a corner where current will carry its sweepers away from its neighbors. Hammer and frog come in many color and shape variants, and can get huge. Bubble coral likes lower light, and has 6 inch sweepers, but is a hardly, fastgrowing coral. it comes in pearl and plain and several colors. Fox is touchier: wait for stability before you risk that one. There are also the brains of various types: scolymia, etc---a little touchier. And the pagodas and turbinarias I believe also come under lps: avoid them until your tank ages a bit, watch your alkalinity like a hawk, and then be careful in placement so detritus doesn't settle and stay in the cup.
 
I have been contimplating some LPS corals as well. I have a 12 gallon Aquapod and I do a water change of 3 gallons a week. Should I still dose with calcium?
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8399818#post8399818 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by vlapinta
I have been contimplating some LPS corals as well. I have a 12 gallon Aquapod and I do a water change of 3 gallons a week. Should I still dose with calcium?

It really depends on what LPS you have. I'm convinced that some LPS can suck up calcium and alkalinity faster than some SPS corals. For example candy canes and euphyllias both of which lay down massive skeletal structure and can grow very rapidly. However others such as Acans and Micros do not lay down us much skeletal structure and use less. Best thing to do is like Sk8r mentioned test on a daily basis untill you know what the uptake is...then you can cut back your testing and just adjust your suppliments as your demands change.
 
WOW great advice you guys! i have also been looking into LPS corals. of course my tank is a FOWLR at the moment and has been up and running for a couple of years. it is a 29 gal and i have been looking into candycanes, frog and hammer as you all have said. any other hardy corals that you think i should give a try at once i am ready? thanks for all your input and sorry about "stealing" your thread benray
 
Dosing is not all that important IMO when it comes to LPS corals. Most of the time waterchanges will fix it with the addition of dripping kalkwasser for top off water.
 
I only have a 12 gallon Aquapod that I change 3 gallons weekly. I am a newbie and I am looking for the simplest way to do this. I have read abut Randys 2 part mix but I think to make it myself for a 12 gallon tank might be too much... Would the water changes weekly add the nutrients I need or is there a simpler solution if I have to add additives?

Vicki
 
Before dosing I would test your calcium and alkalinity. Get a beginning reading and go very slowly, especially with that small of a tank. Don't dose anything before you have test kits to test at the beginning and while you are dosing.

Eric Borneman book on Corals is great, unfortunately I made the mistake of getting an elegance and LTP before knowing how bad they do in captivity.
 
2 more to avoid...goniopora and alveopora...gonis are usually called "flower pots". both of the above have a poor survival rate equal to or less than the elegance.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8402537#post8402537 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ek9vboi
Dosing is not all that important IMO when it comes to LPS corals. Most of the time waterchanges will fix it with the addition of dripping kalkwasser for top off water.

That all depends on which LPS. Any fast growers suck up calcium and alkalinity just as fast as SPS do. I have to dose 500ml a week (~ 70 ml per day) each part A + B in my LPS dominated tank.
 
Great write up Sk8r!

Test, test, test! You cannot come up with an effective routine until you know your tank. I also test for Magnesium, especially if the tank is going through a coralline bloom.

I drip kalkwasser daily and once a week I test Ca/Alk/ Mg and adjust as needed. I do a 20% water change once a month.

I started with candy canes and frogspawns. I added hammers torches, blastos and acans later.
 
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