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Would need a clearer photo showing corallite photo to tell, but looks like either Leptastrea or Favites cf pentagona to me.Since we’re on the topic what is this?![]()
True Favia don't exist in the hobby.I am leaning to Leptastrea, as i think favias have more flesh around the eyes.
Thanks. Tried to get a better photo but my blues are too blue and my camera can’t focus. I’m pretty sure it isn’t a favites because its polyps are tiny and have uniform size. I have a yellow Leptastrea and this does look similar but its polyps are about half the size of the yellow lepta.Would need a clearer photo showing corallite photo to tell, but looks like either Leptastrea or Favites cf pentagona to me.
Thanks. Tried to get a better photo but my blues are too blue and my camera can’t focus. I’m pretty sure it isn’t a favites because its polyps are tiny and have uniform size. I have a yellow Leptastrea and this does look similar but its polyps are about half the size of the yellow lepta.
If there is a clear separation between oral disc and coenosarc, it's Favites; if the whole corallite is the oral disc, then it's Leptastrea. I'm leaning more towards Lepastrea, since I can see the tentacles, and the tentacles seem to contain zooxanthellae.Thanks. Tried to get a better photo but my blues are too blue and my camera can’t focus. I’m pretty sure it isn’t a favites because its polyps are tiny and have uniform size. I have a yellow Leptastrea and this does look similar but its polyps are about half the size of the yellow lepta.

