Coral - Frag - Chalice - Space Invader
Article number: | 14881 |
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All frags are propagated from this pictured chalice coral. The chalice is a colonial coral which is partly encrusting and partly forms laminate plates or tiers. It is native to the western and central Indo-Pacific.
Chalice Coral
Easy to Moderate
Semi-Aggressive
Indian Ocean, Pacific Ocean, Atlantic Ocean (typically collected off the coast of Australlia, around numerous different Indo-Pacific islands, in the Red Sea, and further North off the coast of Japan)
Lobophylliidae (Indo-Pacific Species) & Merulinidae (Atlantic Species)
Large Polyp Stony
Chalice corals are made up of several different species. In 2016, the chalice family Pectiniidae was abolished. Chalice under the genera Echinomorpha, Echinophyllia and Oxypora were transferred to Lobophylliidae, and the genera Mycedium, Pectinia and Physophyllia were transferred to Merulinidae.
Chalices are fairly easy to care for and require low to moderate lighting and moderate flow. Of course, you should always maintain proper water parameters by maintaining good calcium, magnesium, and alkalinity levels.
Some chalices can be known to send out long sweeper tentacles to feed at night, so use caution when placing them in your aquarium and give them some room away from other corals.
Although Chalice corlas are mainly photosynthetic, relying on the products of their zooxanthellae, they should also be fed phytoplankton, zooplankton and mysis, as well as other products like Coral Feast and Reef Energy or other amino acids and probiotics.