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Wow,. that looks completely different than the images I have seen online. Also, the white long polyps as opposed to the red shorter ones. Interesting.The colors look opposite to my red planet when it was small and in lower light; it had a green growing edge and a red base, this appears to be the opposite. I'll try to dig up a pic.
Edit: found one
I have been gradually ramping up my lights to see how it affects things. Also, the frags are near the top on the frag rack, so I'm watching to see if they turn out different than the colony, which is currently near the bottom of the tank.I have both as well bu they’re quite small.
Both needed more light so I’m moving them up to 350 par. Hope to see them color up soon.
That is not ORA Red Planet, nice acro though.The colors look opposite to my red planet when it was small and in lower light; it had a green growing edge and a red base, this appears to be the opposite. I'll try to dig up a pic.
Edit: found one
It just looks like the axial polyp is still out on your colony. If you have no source as to where it came from then I would just call it a red/or red/green table acro (A. Hyacinthus), because I'm sure that's what it'll turn out to be.The encrusting growth does look similar, but again the polyps are different.
Yeah, what makes things more difficult is that there are 100s of pics that are labelled something, but they very widely and many are not even close the the supposed originals. So just doing an image search doesn't often help. Comes down to popular opinion I suppose much of the time.Red Planet from ORA while not a rare or expensive coral it is often counterfeited.