Red Planet Growth

LawmanRob

SPS Addict
Some growth shots from my Red Planet Frag.

March 2011

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Dec 2011

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Sorry the first pic is from March 2011....LOL....the colors is washed out did'nt feel like using photoshop today.
 
Dont let them knock ya.. for 8 months its still pretty good. I would be proud of it too regardless of what it is or what people say.
 
Thanks Mock, I've never seen negative posts like this? In person the color is just fine, the green pocciliopora next to is supper green and the Acro in the bacround is yellow and purple, but in the pic the colors are just not coming through. As for PE none of my acros have much while the Main lights are on, once all the lights are off they all have great PE. But thanks for the negative comments anyways. Guess that'll teach me to post here.
 
I feel you man. That was totally unnecessary. It looks great man. I take pics of my corals every month to see how much they've grown. It's a great feeling to see them growing! It means your doing something right lol! Which in this hobby, especially with sps, it's difficult to know when you are doing something right. Great shots man.
 
Nice growth. Looks like a red planet to me...obviously the colors are washed out, but you can see the green base.
 
Progression shots are the best! Good job. So just out of curiousity, what is the yellow and purple acro in the background?
 
for 8 months its alright growth. however, no polyp extension..To satisfy the enthusiast try taking a picture where the polyps are extended. What lights are u running it under. In general.. Its looking good, but no polyps seen thats all.
 
Anthony Calfo was recently in a LONG thread on another site that goes in depth on PE... Those of you who think PE is a good thing might want to check up on it.

Healthy corals do not always have good PE


Figured I would just quote it....

"Flow is only a mild influence in some cases (LPS receiving too much flow will stay retracted for safety, lest vessicles get torn from their bodies...LOL).

No...polyp extension is more about food/waste dynamics. Catching food, catching light (to an extent, as with the aforementioned panning for light all corals do in lower light environs), purging waste, etc

And keep in mind that one's hardware above the tank is not the end of the story. Just because the lights are big and bad doesn't mean they are good. A slight discoloration to the water from lack of carbon, ozone and or water changes can absolutely CRIPPLE light penetration at depth. So a bright looking fixture could still fail to support corals if the water its illuminating isn't maintained.

Also, a small amount of dust or debris, salt crust, etcetera on the bulbs or lenses is likewise crippling to light penetration.

For whatever reason, if the light doesnt reach the corals, they will stretch and pan for it in an attempt to spread out zoox and catch more of the weakly available light.

Same goes for feeding. If corals don't get enough food/nitrogen, they will starve and also stretch polyps with the hope of increasing their chances of catching prey or trapping more debris in the high surface area of mucous covered tissue.

Another reason is to purge waste. But also purge debris. A particularly scummy mfg sells a "coral supplement" that is basically fine sand packaged in the South Pacific and sold in overpriced little jars. It is insoluble calcium carbonate!!! But it claims to benefit corals and improve polyp extension. Only one of those two things is true...and that's still not good. This coral sand/powder is sediment(!) that sticks to coral tissues and they have to expand to slough it off! That is biologically expensive to an animal already not getting peak bacterioplankton, zooplankton, etc

When I see big polyp expansion, I'm usually looking to see whats wrong. Its usually not a healthy sign. Prime example in the every day is the sps enthusiasts that keep zero nitrates, a low fish load, no DSB and no other significant means of delivering nutrition to their corals. As such, those frags pan for light for some months (even over a year if enough fish waste lets them hang in long enough) before they ?mysteriously" die and the sps keeper is puzzled. I'm just puzzled that they are puzzled. LOL"
 
Anthony Calfo was recently in a LONG thread on another site that goes in depth on PE... Those of you who think PE is a good thing might want to check up on it.

Healthy corals do not always have good PE"
All the really healthy SPS tanks I have seen at least have moderate PE...IMO a total lack of PE (or very little) is a worse sign than ridiculous PE.
 
Here are some shots I took moments ago after lights out. I know the my yellow tail dwarf angle occasionally nips at my sps and that may cause them to remain retracted during daylight. All taken with flash.

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Yeah man, you dont have a problem with polyp extension... Your corals look great! Keep up the good work man. Dont let people get under your skin here... make sure then ones you are listening to are the right ones... Not everyone here is a reef expert but some know more than others.
 
Good growth to me man. Some corals will stay dormant for awhile and just take off. Color is pretty good also probably better in person.
 
Thanks addict; I bought a new pocc frag and as soon as I placed it in the tank my angel fish came right over and started picking at it. All day I have been trying to catch him out. I really think my sps will appreciate his eviction.
 
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