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hahaha I guess we will know more in a year when its fully grown.I know gorgonians reasonably well. I see and collect some in the Florida Keys when I snorkel. But based on those photos, I'd be had pressed to even try a guess. Sorry.
hahaha I guess we will know more in a year when its fully grown.
How do I know if I have to feed it?
It was someone on Facebook, he said he had some, cut me two frags and I forgot to ask but I think he didn't know.Interesting gorg. I keep different types of photosynthetic gorgonians, and I don’t recognize this one. I agree with Ron and would be hesitant to guess.
When you got it, was it labeled as photosynthetic or NPS?
For photosynthetic gorgs, they appreciate a lot of flow, and even though they can get some nutrition via photosynthesis, they still benefit from pretty regular feeding. If it’s an NPS, you’ll need to feed very often.
If you aren’t sure, then I would think waiting to see how it acts at night vs daytime to maybe get a hint. Most of my photosynthetic gorgs don’t have much polyp extension at night, whereas NPS gorgs I’ve had in the past really come alive at night.
Hard to see on my phone but may be a blueberry or purple candelabra
It does look like a purple candelabra!Hard to see on my phone but may be a blueberry or purple candelabra
hooo dayum I don't know anymore hahaKnobby Sea Rod maybe....