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Yeah I tried my best to put it somewhere with a medium more hectic flow… I was a little worried the flow was a little on the low side… but I’ll just keep an eye on it! Thank you for the reassuranceIt looks fine to me. It likes medium random flow (i.e. not just blowing one direction) .
The thing to watch for is flesh/tissue recession. When it's more closed up, look at the stem/skeleton and note how wide the flesh band is. If this starts to recede, then the coral is declining. Euphyllia (torches, cristada) and fimbriaphyllia (hammers, frogspawn, octospawn) can appear healthy, with good tentacle extension, until the day they die... So keeping an eye on recession is key. (If there is no tissue band, then at least the crown of the coral should have the tissue intact - seeing bare septae or damage on the top of the retracted polyp is a bad sign).Yeah I tried my best to put it somewhere with a medium more hectic flow… I was a little worried the flow was a little on the low side… but I’ll just keep an eye on it! Thank you for the reassurance
if you are worried that there is too little flow, you can always post a videoYeah I tried my best to put it somewhere with a medium more hectic flow… I was a little worried the flow was a little on the low side… but I’ll just keep an eye on it! Thank you for the reassurance
The way it's extending in the photo pretty much assumes adequate flowif you are worried that there is too little flow, you can always post a video
I will try to pay attention and keep track of that! Thank you so much for the adviceThe thing to watch for is flesh/tissue recession. When it's more closed up, look at the stem/skeleton and note how wide the flesh band is. If this starts to recede, then the coral is declining. Euphyllia (torches, cristada) and fimbriaphyllia (hammers, frogspawn, octospawn) can appear healthy, with good tentacle extension, until the day they die... So keeping an eye on recession is key. (If there is no tissue band, then at least the crown of the coral should have the tissue intact - seeing bare septae or damage on the top of the retracted polyp is a bad sign).
Thanks so muchLooks good to me!
The dream fingers crossed I don’t mess it upIt seems happy to me, keep it thriving and this time next year you’ll likely have 10+ heads on that bad boy