"Breeding" new coral color morphs

Charlie the Reefer

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Hello everyone,

I've seen some coral that are "grafted" together to essentially give the colony a different look once it grows out.

My question is... Is it possible to actually "breed" two different types of coral together (say, a gold hammer and a green frogspawn) to get a new color morph (gold/green frammer) in your tank? Or am I just mis understanding genetics/ biology.

If there is research being done on this topic/white papers, or some site anyone could point me towards I would really appreciate that as well. I'm very fascinated by this and will be an extensive "research rabbit hole" for me.

Thanks everyone!

Charlie
 
It’s theoretically possible as long as the corals are the same species (or can be crossbred) - there are a few coral breeding projects going on by hobbyists on the forum here (Such as this one: https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/cynarina-lacrymalis-spawning-project-setup.899403/ ) but the only professional project I’m aware of is this one: https://www.horniman.ac.uk/project/project-coral/

Getting corals to spawn and then raising them successfully is a challenge, but it is possible, and the Horniman Project above has a ton of information on the topic that would be helpful.

Edit: just adding, I’m not sure how coral color genetics work, as some animals are fairly simple and some are complex, and others have simple general patterns with a few more complex patterns available- like brown and, if I remember correctly, “lilac” colorations in sheep).
 
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It’s theoretically possible as long as the corals are the same species (or can be crossbred) - there are a few coral breeding projects going on by hobbyists on the forum here (Such as this one: https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/cynarina-lacrymalis-spawning-project-setup.899403/ ) but the only professional project I’m aware of is this one: https://www.horniman.ac.uk/project/project-coral/

Getting corals to spawn and then raising them successfully is a challenge, but it is possible, and the Horniman Project above has a ton of information on the topic that would be helpful.

Edit: just adding, I’m not sure how coral color genetics work, as some animals are fairly simple and some are complex, and others have simple general patterns with a few more complex patterns available- like brown and, if I remember correctly, “lilac” colorations in sheep).
Thank you very much for the response. I'll research both links.

Charlie
 

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