I know they dont like alot of light, and need to be fed everyday just about, but what about flow? mine is in a higher flow spot in well shaded place and are always hyper extended is that a good sign?
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Hi m and m,
Dendrophyllia are non-photosynthetic. They do not need light to survive but need meaty food almost daily to thrive. If you have good polyp extension that is a good sign but make sure you feed them either mysis shrimp, squid, clams or anything meaty.
They like medium flow best I would say. Any questions, let me know.
They'll grow faster if you do. Feeding one polyp does not provide the entire colony with nutrition.Yes i get great extension and they are feeding and accepting rods food when my lights are on, but do i need to feed each polyp individualy?
I would leave them where they lie. As Brett (Acro76) mentioned it can cause the tissue to lighten (in between coralites), but assuming they're opening and feeding they should be fine.Also i do have mine in a higher flow spot under a rock but i still feel there getting alot of light because of the window and the light bouncing off the bottom of the tank (tin foil under it) do you think i should leave it all unless i see tissue recession or move it now even tho i have great extension right now?
Yes. I've seen Dendrophyllia Sp. consume too much food and witnessed two things happen, 1.) they spit it out (more common), and 2.) they cannot digest the food fast enough and it rots inside them which can cause negative effects. I feed one P.E. Mysis shrimp (a very large Mysis shrimp), several brine shrimp, small piece of silverside, or small piece of krill (large krill) per feeding, which is generally three to four times a week.Can you feed Dendros 'too much' ?
In the wild there are copious amounts of zoaplankton and detrius that swoops pass these types of corals for them to feed upon wherein our aquaria this doesn't happen.It will help just like with anything else, but nobody feeds them individually in the wild![]()
Certainly. They catch plenty of excess food out of the water column in your system. My system is the total opposite in that I feed my large polyp non-photosynthetic coral three to four times a week and let the fish catch excess food; He's never fed directlyI feed my fish 3x a day so that might be relative.

Who is?BTW _ you guys are thinking of sun polyps - the ones that you have to feed daily to survive/thrive.

