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Sclerites does not mean it’s stereonephthya. Litophyton has sclerites. Some of them so bold it could be mistake. For lito. The big difference is the shape of the polyps. Those polyps, from what I can see in the photo, do not expand or close in the manner stereo does and they are also very small and stereo normally has larger polyps.
Here's a night shot I took a while ago.
Here is a picture of some litophyton I have that’s remarkably similar to the photo you took.Here's a night shot I took a while ago.
Also when the lights come on, eventually it should open up fully. Especially when the lights come on.I somehow cut off part of my reply. Since the polyps are colors and the body white there is a good chance this is a non photosynthetic version of stereo. So you may have to work a bit harder to keep it alive
Interesting! When mine closes up it looks super "spikey", almost like it has a skeleton. It doesn't close up like how your frag does in the photo you sent. I'll try and grab a photo of it when it happens. It looks almost identical to the Koji Wada nepthea photo on unique corals website, especially in white light. Is the koji wada a lito? I still think it's beautiful regardless of what species it is Edit: found a photo from reef raft, my piece is from the same colonyHere is a picture of some litophyton I have that’s remarkably similar to the photo you took.
Interesting! When mine closes up it looks super "spikey", almost like it has a skeleton. It doesn't close up like how your frag does in the photo you sent. I'll try and grab a photo of it when it happens. It looks almost identical to the Koji Wada nepthea photo on unique corals website, especially in white light. Is the koji wada a lito? I still think it's beautiful regardless of what species it is Edit: found a photo from reef raft, my piece is from the same colony
So, the stereonephthya people are selling is actually litophyton?
Interesting! When mine closes up it looks super "spikey", almost like it has a skeleton. It doesn't close up like how your frag does in the photo you sent. I'll try and grab a photo of it when it happens. It looks almost identical to the Koji Wada nepthea photo on unique corals website, especially in white light. Is the koji wada a lito? I still think it's beautiful regardless of what species it is Edit: found a photo from reef raft, my piece is from the same colony
interesting, thanks for the info!The one I sent is the "koji not koji" I got from unique corals. I also got some of the standard from them but then the frag I posted as well. My frag is also spiky. Litophyton can go from no supporting bundles to substantial ones, just as stereo can have larger and smaller ones (spikes).
If you look at how your polyps pull in rather than folding like a jack knife, that's why I think it's Litophyton. The once "nephthea" species since merged with the older class litophyton.
That was my point. Looking for pictures of people's soft tree corals that are photosynthetic. While different species may look very similar, it would be useful for people like me)I'd take any taxonomy with a grain of salt until more DNA is tested. Does it really matter?
Could this be a stereonephthya? (Just trying to identify it)
Look in the circle. The three polyps are still closed and they appear to have the elbows.