I'd like to report some very interesting work that Jake Adams has undertaken and which I am supporting. Jake operates the coralite.com website, and is planning on attending graduate school in marine sciences at U.Sc.
Jake is going to be working with a dedicated tank for filming Dendronepnthya feeding behavior, using a device called a "mesoscope"- essentially a video microscope. He has already done some outstanding work on zooxanthellae.
We are going to be filming Dendro response to a variety of foods, filming polyp counts, and response to flow regimes. This work should be fascinating and we hope to present it at MACNA. In any event, watch the web site and you are welcome to continue to support our efforts at understanding husbandry of these animals.
I think Jake has very wisely chosen to work with the mesoscope; it will help close the gap between what aquarists can do and what can be learned. Consider assisting him in some way!
On a related front- it seems likely that the problems of dendro husbandry are similar to the problem of aquaculturing larvae, which need to be fed. Jake and I are going to be testing (at his site and at mine) colloidal larval shrimp feed from Epicore, as well as a probiotic product to discourage Vibrio.
This combination works well in shrimp growout ponds, apparently much better than without the probiotic.
I find that heavy feeding of dendros tends to foul the water- the skimmer collapses each time they are fed. My solution is to use a bare bottom tank for the dendros, and a rapid flow Chaeto filter which will take up ammonia without taking up particulates. That system is connected to a slow flow Chaeto sump with coral gravel. The slow flow sump is cleaned with a diatom filter and carbon once weekly to remove bacterial floc, and is then treated with a probiotic. I will add an iron/manganese supplement for the Chaeto, but will not use a skimmer.
Keep posted on the Coralite.com site to follow or participate.
Charles Matthews