Frog spawn is please

DF4_Ace

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 6, 2018
Messages
42
Reaction score
30
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Just picked up this frag from the LFS, the colony was branched. What is the exact name of this coral please

image.jpg
 
Frogspawn.. beyond that, it needs to be open to tell for sure. Most frogspawn don't have a fancy whizbang name like many of the SPS corals out there
 
Frogspawn.. beyond that, it needs to be open to tell for sure. Most frogspawn don't have a fancy whizbang name like many of the SPS corals out there
Is it open now ? I don’t know how to tell when they are open or closed. This is my first time having these

image.jpg
 
Is it open now ? I don’t know how to tell when they are open or closed. This is my first time having these

image.jpg
Frogspawn.. beyond that, it needs to be open to tell for sure. Most frogspawn don't have a fancy whizbang name like many of the SPS corals out there
and do you have any advice to have them thrive
 
Open-ING yes.. not all the way yet though.
Moderate lighting, and moderate indirect flow keeps Euphillia, like your frogspawn happy.
 
Open-ING yes.. not all the way yet though.
Moderate lighting, and moderate indirect flow keeps Euphillia, like your frogspawn happy.
Alright thanks ! I’ll post a progress pic
 
Another word of advice..
Looks like your tank is pretty young. Corals like a very stable environment. I would let things ride for a bit before adding more corals. Make sure everything is a stable as possible for 3-4 months before spending a bunch of money on corals that might not do well in the fluctuating environment of a new tank.
Keep the questions coming, we are here to help.
 
Let you parameters swing all over the place. Forget to plug in your heater. Put you hands in the tank every 12 hours. Constantly move the corals and rocks around. Over feed and let algae over run your tank. Electrocute the tank. That's been my success recipe for my frogspawn.

just kidding. These are pretty hardy corals, take good care of them and they will reward you. They can do well in a variety of light and flow, moderate is recommended. If the light or flow is too much, they will stay compact. Low and they will extend reaching more and become more translucent.


IMG_7948.JPG
 
Another word of advice..
Looks like your tank is pretty young. Corals like a very stable environment. I would let things ride for a bit before adding more corals. Make sure everything is a stable as possible for 3-4 months before spending a bunch of money on corals that might not do well in the fluctuating environment of a new tank.
Keep the questions coming, we are here to help.
Alright I won’t add anymore until it’s stable
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%

New Posts

Back
Top