FAQs about Elegance Coral Environmental Disease
FAQs on Elegance Coral Disease:
Elegance Coral Disease/Pests
1, Elegance Coral Health
2, Elegance Coral Health
3, Elegance Coral Health
4,
FAQs on Elegance Disease by Category:
Diagnosing,
Nutritional, Social (Allelopathy),
Trauma,
Pathogenic (Infectious, Parasitic, Viral)
Predatory/Pest,
Treatments
Articles on: Coral Pests and Disease; pests,
predators, diseases and conditions by Sara Mavinkurve,
Catalaphyllia Coral, Caryophylliids, Large Polyp Stony
Corals
FAQs on Stony Coral Disease: Stony Coral Disease 1, Stony Coral Disease 2, Stony Coral Disease 3, Stony Coral Disease 4, Stony Coral Disease 5, Stony Coral Disease 6, Stony Coral Disease 7, Stony Coral Disease 8, Stony Coral Disease 9, Stony Coral Disease 10, Stony Coral Disease 11, Stony Coral Disease
12, Stony Coral Disease 13,
Stony Coral Disease 14,
Stony Coral Disease 15, Stony Coral
Disease ,
FAQs on Stony Coral Disease by Category: Diagnosing:
Environmental (Pollution/Poisoning, Lighting...),
Nutritional, Social (Allelopathy),
Trauma,
Pathogenic (Infectious, Parasitic, Viral)
Predatory/Pest,
Treatments
FAQs on Stony Coral Disease by Type: Brown Jelly Disease, RTN,
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Catalaphyllia live in/on muddy/muck substrates in the
wild... VERY fine sand that's not too clean for hobbyists
There are hard to keep collected in deep water
specimens; as well as better (Australian generally) from shallower
(ten-twenty feet) reefs.
Not much current or light desired; but definitely
regular meaty feedings
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Elegance coral question for Bob Fenner 5/10/09
Hi Bob,
I have a pair of elegance corals.
<Mmm, Catalaphyllias are near the top in terms of physical
stingy-ness...
And don't mix well often with other specimens that they're
"unfamiliar with"... Have you read on WWM re...?>
I have a pink tip frag from a 19 year old colony that's been with
me for about 6 months and is growing rapidly.
Currently he is the lone inhabitant of my tank with a 3.5" DSB
established for almost 2 years and about 14 blades of seagrass- shoal
grass I think. I picked up a frag of an Australian purple tipped
elegance at MAX '09 in Costa Mesa about 5 weeks ago and has been in
QT since. He is eating well and looks 'happy.'
a) I'm not sure about the length of QT required for ECS to manifest
itself.
<...Elegance Coral Syndrome? See WWM re the health of this species
period>
b) Will there be a problem if the pink tip elegance and purple tip
elegance touch each other?
<Yes. Very likely>
They expand so much! The pink tip appears to have a stronger sting than
the purple tip when food is presented.
<They should expand and contract somewhat... That one/both are doing
this a great deal is symptomatic of "warring">
c) As I mentioned I have 14 blades of seagrass that have been there
since Jan '09. As new ones grow, old ones die -a turn over of about
3-4 leaves a week. I was hoping for more blades of grass!!!
<What do you think are the limiting factors here? Light, some
nutrient/s?>
I started using FW plant fertilizer tabs buried 2" below the DSB
by the roots per Eric Borneman's advice at MAX '09, but I see
no change.
<Does take time... Could be summat else>
Thank You,
Narayan
<Be chatting, Bob Fenner>
Re: Elegance coral question for Bob Fenner
5/10/09
Hi Bob,
Thank you very much for your reply.
a) The purple tip elegance coral is still in QT. The pink tip and
purple tip elegance have not been in contact yet. The expansion and
contraction is based on light. The pink tip reduced it's size by
50% at night. The purple tip basically withdraws completely in to its
skeleton at night -from being 6" across down to about 1"!
<Mmm, vigorous... again, I would not likely "mix" the two
specimens in the same system/water>
b) I don't know how long to QT the purple tip to ensure that it
doesn't suffer from ECS. Is 6 weeks enough?
<See WWM re... I don't "believe" in such a syndrome...
there are ways to strengthen this and other Scleractinian, Cnidarian
species re too-easy mortality. These are adequately covered/archived on
our site>
c) As for the shoal grass, they grow fast enough. The old leaves just
die off just as fast as new growth! That's what I need to stop.
Currently I get 3-4 new leaves a week, same as the death rate! So I
guess I have a stable population of shoal grass leaves. They are
planted in a mature 2 year old 3.5" DSB, in 12" of water
under a 20K 70W metal halide bulb. They only problem I see is that
since I'm also fishless, and have been so for 2 years, there are
ton of different pods left over from my live rock days that now hang
out on the grass blades. I wonder if they are my problem!
Thanks a lot!
Narayan
<Couldn't say... but I do think both you and I could devise an
experimental method to test this hypothesis... Mmmm? Bob Fenner>
Re: Elegance coral question for Bob Fenner
5/11/09
Hi Bob!
I'm just recovering from Multiple Tank Syndrome... I guess I need a
separate setup to house the two elegance corals properly as I like them
both and want to keep them both... This will also allow me to try a
different species of seagrass in the other tank as a bonus!!
<Ahh! Have you seen my Waikiki Aq. pix of their biotope for this
species?
Posted on... WWM>
Okay! Where do I start debugging my problem! My goal is to have a tank
with a DSB covered in seagrass with a lone elegance coral in the middle
-I'm okay if the coral is half hidden by the seagrass... Here's
the setup.
- 16" cube tank with a 14 gallon sump.
<Really too small a volume>
Estimated water volume is around
22 gallons.
- 70W 20K MH. The coral and grass are under <12" of water. The
coral is directly under the bulb. The grass is 4" from the center
of the bulb, along the axis of the bulb as the light intensity along
the axis of the bulb is not that different from just under the
bulb...
- Fishless & Skimmer less. The tank used to house 17 lbs of live
rock and a Duncan coral for 1.5 years as the DSB was maturing. The
coral grew from 1 polyp to 40+ polyps in that time period.
- About 3-5 lbs of live rock in the sump.
- 3.5" DSB -Grain size about 0.5mm.
- Top off (2 cups a day) contains Calcium Hydroxide.
- Specific gravity is set at 1.025 -1.026.
- Temp is between 77.5F and 78.5F as the heater cycles.
- Moderate to low flow as the Elegance seems to be happiest with
that...
- I feed the coral Mysis or Arctic pods once a week.
- The tank gets 20 drops of Reef Nutrition Phytoplankton once a week
for all the pods and one lone Featherduster worm.
Thanks a lot for your time!
Narayan
<Please (re?)read the Catalaphyllia mat.s archived on WWM. B>
Growth on Elegance Coral -- 06/07/07 Hi Crew
Hope all is well. Have pics for you to confirm my research. I have
a growth on the shell <? Where?> of my Elegance Coral and I
am wondering if I should be concerned. Does this look like a sea
spike? (good) or jelly? (bad) <I don't make out any such
growth... though some of the images show a bleached condition...
and this Catalaphyllia is mis-placed... live in the soft substrate
(sand/mud) with the apex of their skeleton "pointed"
down... Please send your image/s with a "circled" area
where you think something is amiss.> Be aware that the pics
where you can see the growth are taken the moment the lights come
on in the tank, and I sent 2 pics to show how open the elegance
becomes about an hour later. Everything looks good, she does not
seem to mind the growth, and the emerald crab eats around the
growth. By the way, the elegance coral is one year old and other
than this is doing wonderful. Ron:>) <... Please read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/elegance.htm And the linked files above.
Bob Fenner> |
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Re: Growth on/of Elegance Coral (more info) -
6/7/07 Bob Fenner <Yo!> Growth is on the clam shell base,
please see pics where I have circled and made notes in photos. By
the way, the growth is the same color as the elegance, but it does
have a bumpy (pointed) surface and something like a mouth opening
where I notated on the side. Keep in mind there are low resolution
pics, I can send a full rez image that would be about 500 kb.
<These are fine... this is very likely "just" the
skeleton of this Catalaphyllia...> as for positioning 1) Placed
in horizontal orientation, point down, mouths and tentacles facing
upward, This is the orientation this coral has been in since I got
it one year ago <... the natural orientation of the species>
NOT in vertical settings as they are often arranged in reef
systems. They really need to be placed "on their backs"
Has never been in this position. 2) Semi-still waters. They come
from settings with actually very little water movement, The first 3
months I had this coral the placement in the photo was the
placement in the tank, it sits about 12'' under the return
from the skimmer and it spread to about 8 to 10 inches in diameter.
I read your article and quite a few others about placement around
the end of August 2006. So out of concern I moved it to an area of
the tank that has very little water flow and point down in the
sand, over the next 3 months it began receding until by December it
had closed up and receded into its clam shell not opening at all
and beginning to separate in the middle. <Interesting> I was
scared and thought it was a goner and decided to go back to what
worked. I put it right back into the notch in the live rock where
it was doing so well in the first place and in 3 weeks it had
started to grow and expand again to where it is today, almost back
to the same size and shape as last August. The only difference
between then and now is when I do feed her, she snatches closed
REALLY fast, almost in a heartbeat.( I feed her Coralife
Invertebrate Target Food about every 3 weeks or so.) <...
also> As to your concern about bleaching... I cannot answer that
with certainty because this is the only Catalaphyllia I have ever
actually seen. It is the same color it has always been since I have
owned it, a really nice tan flesh color with a hint of green hue
and nice purple tips as in the photo (Elegant Coral open 1 lz).
that I sent you before. Ron:>) PS... I am a newbie, so please
don't LOL too hard when I ask what RMF stands for :>?
<Heee! Sorry... my initials... Robert Milton Fenner> |
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Does my Catalaphyllia look ok. Kristy replying
for Toony -- Elegance Coral -- 4/18/07 Hey Brenda <Hi
Kristy> Kristy here, sorry for the confusion, we get it all the
time, my best friend Kristy she goes by the name Toony came around
today and saw me reading more info about my BTA and its bleaching
and thought it was a brilliant site and decided to ask about her
elegance, and as she doesn't have access to the net at home I
told her she can use mine. <Please have Toony add her nick-name
to the bottom so that I can keep these straight. This is
way more than my brain can handle.> Sorry Again for the
confusion. I wish my elegance was doing as good as hers. She only
left about 1/2 hour ago so I just called her to let her know you
have replied and she asks "should I leave my lights off until
her lighting that she ordered arrived at our LFS and how much % of
water change should I do a week." Toony is only as am I, I
recommended her doing a 25% water change a week. As I do. Was I
right, I'd hate to give her the wrong answer. <I need more
information on the tank. Does it have a
skimmer? How many gallons?> She only has the
elegance, 2 green Chromis, maroon clown, a small moon wrasse and an
Anthias, rock and shell grit I think in her 4ft tank, not sure if
she has brought anything new since I last visited. My Catalaphyllia
has a purple tip, Toony's is white. Thanks Kristy Once again
sorry for the confusion. People say that we are just alike but
she's the evil and I'm the good. <I think you're
both evil for being 18 days late for April Fools! Not a
problem, I will take two aspirin and all will be better
tomorrow! LOL If Toony has fish in the tank,
they need to have lights out. Brenda> |
Re: Kristy replying for Toony --
Elegance Coral -- 4/18/07 Hey Brenda TOONY here. <Hi Toony,
much better Now! I would have never been able to keep
two girls straight with the name Kristy, with similar problems and
using the same e- mail address.> My tank is a
70 gal tank, 3" shell grit, 30kilos Live rock, 30 gal sump,
skimmer, pump 2000 L/h, 2x power heads I think are 3000 l/h.
Fish are 2 green Chromis, maroon clown, heralds angel, a
small moon wrasse and an Anthias, temp is 25, ammonia, nitrite,
nitrate all sit on 0, ph 8.3. I have not done hardness test as I
ran out last week but looked ok then. <It sounds like your water
quality is up to par. I would stick to about 10% weekly
water changes. If water quality declines, increase it a
bit. You need to get those lights on the tank ASAP.>
Cheers
Toony
<Brenda> |
Too far out of too large grade, inappropriate substrate.
Where's the ref. referral Bren? RMF
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Help! regarding Elegance coral Hi there,
I was looking for more
info about Elegance coral when I come across the very informative
discussion that you put up on the web . I would
need some advice from you. I just bought a elegance coral today.
I need to know where is the recommended placement in
the tank. << Most people put them on their sand, right in the
front bottom portion of their tank. >> When you mentioned
horizontal placement , does it mean that the coral is to be lie flat on
its cone skeleton.<< Well, it depends on what you think looks
good, <<NO; Blunder-all>> but I like them facing up towards the light. >> Does this
mean that if I place it on the substrate , it rest horizontally
downward and its mouth is facing the front of tank? or is it supposed
to be tilted at an angle? << I've seen them in the
wild and in tanks facing right up to the light. This
doesn't mean they need that, but I think that allows for the best
photosynthesis. Either way feeding it every week or so will
also help out. >> Also , is it true that
elegance should not be placed near to Live rock ? << I don't
believe that. They do live in sandy areas, but to me live
rock is good for everything. >> For your advice pls. Thanks and
Best Regards. Alex << Adam
Blundell >>
Elegance corals Dear Bob I have a 200 gal reef tank
that has been running for over a year. For light I am using 4 6 ft
VHO's and two 250w 10000k halides. Filtration is 4inches of live
sand with plenum, the best possible protein skimmer, and 57w U.V. Temp
is 80F and I use calcium reactor. My question is; Why can't I keep
a elegant coral alive. When I put one in the tank, no matter where, it
comes out the first few days maybe 2 weeks but it then begins to slowly
waste away staying withdrawn into the skeleton the just rotting apart.
I am keeping Acroporas, clams, frogspawn, hammers, torch corals,
Blastomussa and even a Pectinia but a elegant will die every time. No
one has been able to answer this question even people who are very
knowledgeable and have seen the tank. Some of these elegance corals
have been doing well in other tanks for weeks but of course die in
mine. James Lewis >> James, you are the "consumer" who
broke the writer's back... and I thank you. Am going to move way-up
my schedule for writing about Catalaphyllia (Elegance
corals). Seems like only yesterday
(because it was) that I was taking pictures at the Waikiki Aquarium of
their specialized "Elegance Coral Tank". Let me describe this
set-up for you (all). It had a few inches of fine
sand, a bunch (really too many, I'd clear some so you could see the
coral specimen) "grass" (in their case Thalassia hemprichii)
a few fishes (a Phalaena goby, gorgeous green filefish, unid'ed
rockfish of some sort), not much circulation, no added aeration, but
bright light (the plants and algae were giving off obvious gas bubbles
from the halides and sunlight (the roof is "missing")... and
the specimen? It was alone, by itself, lying in the
"mud/sand" horizontal on the bottom. Now,
let me assure you, I've collected this (and other) Caryophyllid
(the family of this, the Euphyllias like Frogspawn, hammer...) corals
in the wild, and this is how all Elegance corals I've seen live:
Horizontal, in relatively stagnant, grassy areas, with bright light,
low circulation, with no other stinging celled animals around, in
probably "high nutrient" settings. And how
do aquarists by and large try to keep Catalaphyllias? In vertical
orientations, with brisk, constant circulation, in almost nutrient-free
water, with other aggressive stinging-celled animals...
Now, does all this make more/better/any sense? These
animals are being kept in barely to un-tolerable conditions. They
don't live in environments like your other corals at all. The
places where I've seen them live are more like wild conditions...
Bob Fenner
Elegance Coral decline Bob, I read your q/a in FFExpress,
sporadically. But, I always learn something. My question is concerning
the elegance coral (Catalaphyllia jardinei). I have one that looked
great coming from the store and continued to look that way for about 2
weeks in my 75 gal. tank. After feeding it some frozen brine and
silversides (the second time I fed it in the 2 weeks) it started to
decline. It seemed to collapse then swell up around the edges and it
hasn't extended it's tentacles much in a couple of weeks now.
There is one area where it has pulled away from the skeleton. I checked
today for an odor and it still smells healthy. Total of 4 weeks in
tank. I subscribe to a couple of bulletin boards and posted a question
concerning the elegance and almost immediately got a number of
responses... all of them commenting that they either were, or had
experienced this same problem. The elegance is supposed to be an easy
coral, what is going on? Why are so many experienced aquarist having
problems with this "easy" coral? Tank parameters: 75 gal 9
months old 0 nitrite 0 ammonia 8.1 - 8.2 ph <5 nitrate 140 lb Live
Rock (Fiji and Old Florida) 85 lb Live sand (gulf of Mexico/ keys) Tank
inhabitants Open brain coral -- doing great Torch coral -- doing great
Flowerpot -- brought back from the brink of death Devil's hand --
doing great elegance -- mentioned above Green star polyps -- doing
great Yellow polyps -- doing great Regular assortment of snails and
hermits Skunk cleaner shrimp coral banded shrimp sally lightfoot crab
Foxface Rabbitfish Naso Tang (I know he will outgrow this tank, by that
time I'll have a 180 ready for him) Psychedelic Mandarin -- fat and
sassy any idea's? Thank you, Wayne Pierce >> Hey Wayne,
thanks for writing. Yours may be the final goosing I need to finally
get my family Caryophylliidae, Stony Corals We love and hate article
finished. Catalaphyllias/Elegance corals are NOT easy to keep. One more
time on their requirements:1) Not clean water. They live mostly in
inner lagoons and reef flats with high nutrient levels... in the
mud...2) Horizontal orientation... Not vertical or on an angle as in
NOT on an incline of live rock. They live in the mud.3) Not endlessly
blasted by current coming from one (linear) direction. Where do they
live in the wild? In the mud, where it's pretty calm. There's
more, but you get my point. What's more I'm amazed that more
folks in the trade and hobby don't 'fess up about these
gorgeous corals. Historically they don't do much better than the
notorious Poritid family genus Goniopora... But you did by your own
admission, bring one of these (flowerpot) corals back from the brink.
Maybe you can have the same success with the Elegance. Do you have
another system or even a sump you can make into an algae or turtle
grass and elegance habitat? Do you mind a few tens of ppm nitrate
there? Bob Fenner
Elegance corals Dear Bob I have a 200 gal
reef tank that has been running for over a year. For light I am using 4
6 ft VHO's and two 250w 10000k halides. Filtration is 4inches of
live sand with plenum, the best possible protein skimmer, and 57w U.V.
Temp is 80F and I use calcium reactor. My question is; Why cant I keep
a elegant coral alive. When I put one in the tank, no matter where, it
comes out the first few days maybe 2 weeks but it then begins to slowly
waste away staying withdrawn into the skeleton the just rotting apart.
I am keeping Acroporas, clams, frogspawn, hammers, torch corals,
Blastomussa and even a Pectinia but a elegant will die every time. No
one has been able to answer this question even people who are very
knowledgeable and have seen the tank. Some of these elegance corals
have been doing well in other tanks for weeks but of course die in
mine. James Lewis >> James, you are the
"consumer" who broke the writer's back... and I thank
you. Am going to move way-up my schedule for writing about
Catalaphyllia (Elegance corals). Seems like only yesterday (because it
was) that I was taking pictures at the Waikiki Aquarium of their
specialized "Elegance Coral Tank". Let me describe this
set-up for you (all). It had a few inches of fine sand, a bunch (really
too many, I'd clear some so you could see the coral specimen)
"grass" (in their case Thalassia hemprichii) a few fishes (a
Phalaena goby, gorgeous green filefish, unid'ed rockfish of some
sort), not much circulation, no added aeration, but bright light (the
plants and algae were giving off obvious gas bubbles from the halides
and sunlight (the roof is "missing")... and the specimen? It
was alone, by itself, lying in the "mud/sand" horizontal on
the bottom. Now, let me assure you, I've collected this (and other)
Caryophyllid (the family of this, the Euphyllias like Frogspawn,
hammer...) corals in the wild, and this is how all Elegance corals
I've seen live: Horizontal, in relatively stagnant, grassy areas,
with bright light, low circulation, with no other stinging celled
animals around, in probably "high nutrient" settings. And how
do aquarists by and large try to keep Catalaphyllias? In vertical
orientations, with brisk, constant circulation, in almost nutrient-free
water, with other aggressive stinging-celled animals... Now, does
all this make more/better/any sense? These animals are being kept in
barely to un-tolerable conditions. They don't live in environments
like your other corals at all. The places where I've seen them live
are more like wild conditions... Bob Fenner
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