I feel stupid asking this question.....

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I know all hard coral has a skeleton made up 9f calcium carbonate..... hense calcium ions bonding with carbonate

But what are Soft Tissue corals (like zoas/palys) made up of?



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Good question. This is what I could find on it:
soft corals have a flexible skeleton, made of a protein called gorgonin. Their skeleton also contains calcium carbonate, but only in small clumps called spicules
 
soft corals have a flexible skeleton, made of a protein called gorgonin.

So how is gorgonin built?

I guess what I'm REALLY AFTER is what element can accelerate tissue growth?

For me, Wendy's Double Hamgurgers, BK triple Whoppers....grow my tissue. Lol
 
I guess what I'm REALLY AFTER is what element can accelerate tissue growth?

For me, Wendy's Double Hamburgers, BK Triple Whoppers, McDs Double Quaterpounders......all grow my tissue. Lol
Ha! I have the same issue my friend ;)
 
I'm confused as heck.

Quoting wiki
"most soft corals thrive in nutrient-rich waters with less intense light. Almost all use symbiotic photosynthesizing zooxanthella as a major energy source."

That's like saying to get a deep tan, sit in indirect sunlight under an umbrella

what the heck....
 
Kinda like they need nitrates and your tank light to digest those
 
Zooxanthella are single cell photosynthetic organisms that need your light. The soft corals can't process nitrates without them. Almost like a termite would starve if it weren't for a similar relationship. This is the way I understand it anyway. Feel free to educate me if I'm wrong.
 
IMG_0492-edit-1024x712.jpg

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Makes sense so you get a gold star cookie
 
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I don't think it's a stupid question at all. Eric Borne man's book " Aquarium Corals " is one of several good books on just about everything you want to know about most if not all coral species.
Anyways, the simple answer is that soft corals use calcium carbonate differently. They have small skeletal pieces called sclerites or spicules embedded in the body. Instead of being composed of aragonite used in stoney corals, soft corals are composed of calcite.
The spicules are manufactured in the epidermis cells. Some soft corals form calcified structures to anchor themselves to structures and others might produce rod like internal supports to stay erect.
Species such as zoas and palys even incorporate sand, sediment and rocks for support.

If you want to know even more without reading some of the written material in books on the subject you can check out small articles from these links:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/21768106/

https://www.advancedaquarist.com/blog/octocorals-found-to-be-reef-builders
 
I'm confused as heck.

Quoting wiki
"most soft corals thrive in nutrient-rich waters with less intense light. Almost all use symbiotic photosynthesizing zooxanthella as a major energy source."

That's like saying to get a deep tan, sit in indirect sunlight under an umbrella

what the heck....

Jim, good analogy! ;Bookworm

I think that when they said "less intense light" they mean when compared to stony corals. Not "less intense' as in really dim light. Zoas do well with PAR levels in the 100 to 200 range. The stony corals like a bit more.

This is just guess work on my part, but I wonder if they have so much more zooxanthellae in their fleshy polyps than sps corals with such tiny polyps, that they can do more photosynthesis and therefore need less light?
 

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