Reef Devils
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Thanks for responding. I might move it if the flow is too high. I didn’t know it took weeks for some corals to accumulate. Good to know. ThanksFor a one off photo the only thing I can sort of see/tell is that the tissue is slightly retracted which would usually make me think it is in too much flow or light. If it is in a high flow area move it some where with less direct flow. Since it is on your sand bed I'm going to go with it probably doesn't get too intense of a light and just needs more time to adjust to your lights (it can take a few weeks for corals to adjust to even the smallest of light setting changes).
I thought the green center would expand out.looks normal to me, but photo is a bit blurry/low-res so hard to tell
Oh ok. I thought it would look like this. But the outer ring stays brown?The center shouldn't expand much if at all, the outer ring might get a little more "puffy" but that's about it - part of why I said it's hard to tell in your photo.
Yes, but if you'll notice the inner green is more recessed inside the outer ring - which is the striped ring on yours.Oh ok. I thought it would look like this. But the outer ring stays brown?
yes, this is a different color variant then what you have. they are brown green, all green, or cyan blue.Oh ok. I thought it would look like this. But the outer ring stays brown?
Yes I saw some tentaclesLook at it at lights out to see if it expands it's feeding tentacles.
Thanks for the information. This was my fault for not knowing much about this type of coral. I didn’t know that some are striped candy cane corals. Thanksas stated previously, the coral may 'inflate' slightly and look more full. But so long as tissue is not retracting, or you notice that the skeleton begins to protrude through its tissue, you are ok. Usually med light, med/low flow is ok. You can feed them as well, crushed mysis or brine works. Usually if you feed your fish, the coral will exhibit a feeding response, and that is best time to feed. Or at night when its feeding tentacles are out.