hi , which and how would you classify this species ?There is some confusion with the fire corals (Millepora) which are best known for their stinging upon touch. Fire corals belong to another Class in another Subphylum of Cnidaria than Octocorallia (leather- and softcorals, blue coral) and Hexacorallia (stony corals, anemones).
Fire corals have "hairs" (stinging polyps) and digesting feeding polyps.
The blue coral Heliopora belongs to the Class Octocorallia and it seems very difficult to find a good image of the anatomy of a Heliopora or even just an Octocorallia polyp. What is typical for the anatomy of Octocorallia is eight feathered (pinnulate) tentacles while Hexacorallia always have six or a manifold of six (12, 24, ...) +/- smooth tentacles without pinnules.
Except the protruding polyps the surface of Heliopora is very smooth. Maybe the pinnules of the tentacles may be perceived as "hairs".
The biology of Heliopora is similar to the biology of other zooxanthellate Octocorallia except that it has a calcareous skeleton made up from the calcium carbonate mineral aragonite, in contrast to leather and soft corals.
been in possession since 1991, must have sold /traded/gave away a minivan full by now...