Coral ID Help

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Hello there,

I picked up the candycane coral this guy is living on about a year ago. What I initially thought was aiptasia has not only proven itself to be incredibly resilient, but also has a stony skeleton. Can anyone help me identify what this cute coral actually is?

Thank you!

502536D5-F8B8-4550-8660-DE01F43ED631.jpeg 9B55F591-0D83-46BC-AAB9-D07AC2299186.jpeg
 
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My first guess would be majano anemone.
I had wondered that too, but nope, this guy has a 6-radial symmetry skeleton hidden under all those tentacle. Found that out the hard way trying to scrub him off. Tenacious little guy came back from my near-murder with a toothbrush
 

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majano would be my first though as well. Are you sure it has a skeleton and isnt just attached to a dead coral skeleton?
Does look to be sitting on an LPS skeleton, looks like the stalk of a candy cane or similar branching LPS.

If not a majano, is it a new head of whatever skeleton its on? (though in the picture it looks like that coral is not the same color or structure so I am doubtful)
 
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Definitely has a skeleton of its own, 100% sure on this. It is growing off of the base skeleton of a candycane coral, and I am fairly certain it's not a candycane based on the myriad tentacles it has. I've wondered if my duncan coral somehow had a spawning event, resulting in a baby duncan settling, but that seems so incredibly unlikely.
 
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Possibly galaxea
maybe, but I would guess not, at least it doesn't look like any of the baby/new polyps my galaxea have made. In my experience the new galaxea polyps have been more tentacle, less oral disk. That and the purple dot at the end is something I have not seen in my pursuit of galaxea color morphs.
 
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1680456460023.png


Okay, I could very well be crazy, but could it be a baby Elegance coral? Some of the images in this article about a recent captive breeding breakthrough caught my attention. This thing has been on my candycane frag since I first got it, and I have no idea if that frag was aquacultured, maricultured, wild-caught, or what, so maybe it's a possibility?

Article for reference: https://www.reef2rainforest.com/2022/09/08/captive-bred-elegance-coral-breakthrough/
 

Polyp polynomial: How many heads do you start with when buying zoas?

  • One head is enough to get started.

    Votes: 27 10.6%
  • 2 to 4 heads.

    Votes: 145 57.1%
  • 5 heads or more.

    Votes: 65 25.6%
  • Full colony.

    Votes: 10 3.9%
  • Other.

    Votes: 7 2.8%

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