Names of the Corals?
It would be good to have names for the corals etc. as well as the fish.
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I know most of them, it's easiest if I just write the latin and common names on a jpeg to save confusion. Corals are often very simlar, and microscopy would be used to identify individual members of species. Interestingly most of the corals are in the Large Polyped Stoney coral (LPS) group, with some anenomes too, but very few small polyp corals (SPS). Aggressive stinging and wandering anenones would cause some rapid losses in this tank, starting with neighbouring corals. Many of the invertebrates in this tank have very aggressive defensive stings! Also interesting is the starfish wanders around while motile corals such as the Fungia are fixed. I would say that the Zoathids are indeed Zoas not Palys, although their scale would suggest otherwise in the digital image. I think this is a scale issue and they are in fact zoas that just appear unnaturally large. I have left the Sarkofytun (leather coral) at the top of the bubble column unlabeled as it could, just maybe, be a more desirable Turbinaria (Vase coral). Also, the small LPS cluster could be a type of Caulastrea (Candy Coral) or maybe a Nemenzophyllia (Fox Coral). Left of that, (behind the clams) is possibly a Devils finger soft coral. The LPS hard coral (centre bottom) looks like some kind of Open brain, but not one I can ID with a latin name or be 100% sure of... The purple shading on the far left most rock in the tank is corraline algae, which you would expect to have spread widely throughout a mature tank... ...Hopefully that answers the question... Si |
Can you identify the white coral to the right of Actinodiscus cardinalis?
It's the only (big) coral you didn't mention. |
Simico,
What would the correct scale be for the Zoanthus? |
:TU:
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Simico -- A BIG THANK YOU!! :TU: :)
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Very many thanks for your excellent explanation etc. You are obviously an expert on marine life. It is very much appreciated.
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If I had to (very much) guess from the shape of the skeleton, I could suggest that in life it was something like a Hydnophora Rigida. If alive, this would be a flouresent green due to the symbiotic zooxanthellae. There aren't many white corals, as the corals use various coloured pigments to protect their tissue from UV radiation, although there are some. I would say this was definitely an SPS coral and possibly in life a Hydnophora Rigida (common name Horn Coral). |
You sure know a lot about corals!! If you don't mind, what's the Latin and common names for the bubble coral you referred to above as one of the first successfully kept living corals? And the two iridescent colored ones (one just above the bubble coral and the other one sitting on the gravel below and to the left of the brain coral). :)
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...sorry, I don't see any other corals above the bubble, unless you mean the Elkhorn. I think the one on the gravel is maybe a type of Open Brain LPS, but not 100% sure... |
I'm sorry, my mistake, I see you do have a Bubble coral cited. I meant the coral or maybe they're just shells that the stream of air bubbles are arising out of... :o
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Thanks. It's good to learn about these corals and shells, dead and alive. What's the iridescent one to the left of the Zoas and also the green one above the Maxima clams? :)
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Great graphic simico! That's a keeper. Do you have a higher quality version?
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Yes, it's an Open Brain coral.
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...here you go! http://i307.photobucket.com/albums/n...pdatedcopy.jpg There are certainly some possible alternatives as discussed above, but for ease, I have put (what are IMO) the most likely choices on this version. I read that Jim will be animating some of these. This will really add realism to the corals, as their soft tissues currently appear "frozen". In the case of the Quadricolour, (AKA Rose bubble tip/ Bulb Anemone), it is true that anemones wander/walk around tanks too, but once established, and once they have found a good location, plant their foot deep into a rock crevice, and then generally stay put in the same place. So just an animation of the tentles is enough! An easier animation, (as the clownfish won't need to interact with it), would be the Hammer coral. At the moment the polyps are retracted, but once the polyps are out they can sway about much the same way as an anemone and again this would dramatically improve the realism. The Clams, Zoas, Bubble coral, and the motile corals are also good candidates, but only if resources allow...(!) I have to say the best thing about this tank is the way you can have so many corals in one place, without worring about normal compatibility issues and placement, or the HUGE cost if this existed! Frankly, if I hadn't named them all, I wouldn't have appricieated just how many corals Jim had put in there... An amazing piece of work! |
:TU: :)
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