Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Doesn’t have the brightest colors, but it’s got great movement. Second photo was when I first got it.Got a pic of your torch?
Awesome!Doesn’t have the brightest colors, but it’s got great movement. Second photo was when I first got it.
To add to that, I have mine underneath my HOB filter where it hits it's long polyps but not so much it's fleshy body. In probably about 150 par +/-. I feed it reef roids, frozen mysis, brine, LRS and rods separately on different days and my guy is thriving. I even have a pistol shrimp who does everything he can to move and bury him. My clowns love to play inside of it too, it really puffs up after feeding it and not even my lobo, Duncan's or acans can match its appetite.Moderate water flow and lighting are crucial. Too little flow and they will be miserable and too much like euphyllia coral- you risk tearing the flesh off the skeleton. Moderate flow will provide food and nutrients to reach them and being a photosynthetic coral, provide moderate to medium light will help with their zooxanthellae which is within them to provide color and energy.
They must be fed 2-3x a week with foods such as krill, Mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, or small pieces of fish, and shrimp. Powdered foods such as reef roids will not satisfy their needs.