Torch placement please help And identification....Australian something

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Ok, so I just got home from work and my wonderful daughter presented me with a beautiful gift. I know it’s a torch and she said it’s an Australian something lol. Can someone please help identify and help in placement of my new addition? First is a pic of the coral she brought home and the next pics of my tank and existing coral placement.
64D6A40F-F89B-43FA-839F-ACF3AA56B6CD.jpeg
image.jpg image.jpg
 
Keep it near lower flow, and somewhere near the bottom for now. They can be conditioned to higher flow later on. Be careful handling it out of water, their skin is delicate and can tear which can lead to a bacterial infection and kill the colony. Yours reminds me of my old gold aussie torch but I am not certain what yours is... you can also try posting this in the LPS forum
 
Yup, low flow, low light, keep off sand. If it starts to rip it's tentacles off, lights are too high. If it doesn't you're pretty much set.
 
Keep it near lower flow, and somewhere near the bottom for now. They can be conditioned to higher flow later on. Be careful handling it out of water, their skin is delicate and can tear which can lead to a bacterial infection and kill the colony. Yours reminds me of my old gold aussie torch but I am not certain what yours is... you can also try posting this in the LPS forum
Ten four, thanks for the advice. I’ll take a pic of it once I get it placed and it extends. Thank you! I’m just afraid of what it’s gonna sting.
 
Yup, low flow, low light, keep off sand. If it starts to rip it's tentacles off, lights are too high. If it doesn't you're pretty much set.
Can I put it on sand if it’s on a frag?
 
This is where I’d like to place it. 795D6DC8-74E1-4AB7-BE9B-F1B327D3759A.jpeg
 
You don't want the tentacles rubbing on the sand. It's an aussie so should be alright. Just keep an eye and if you see it touching the sand, you can probably find a rock to place it on in the corner.
 
Ok, so I just got home from work and my wonderful daughter presented me with a beautiful gift. I know it’s a torch and she said it’s an Australian something lol. Can someone please help identify and help in placement of my new addition? First is a pic of the coral she brought home and the next pics of my tank and existing coral placement.
64D6A40F-F89B-43FA-839F-ACF3AA56B6CD.jpeg
image.jpg image.jpg
very hard to tell type of aussie as your light is very blue in pic.
Torch do best in lower third of tank but keep it off of sandbed which sand can irritate it.
One of the biggest problems I have seen beginner hobbyists have is failing to account for the calcium demand for these corals. If there is insufficient calcium in your aquarium water, these corals will not be able to make their coral skeleton. You should also never lift a torch coral out of the water if you can avoid it. You could tear the polyps, and torn polyps are prone to infection followed by necrosis
Torch require typical parameters including a temperature around 78 degrees, a specific gravity of about 1.025, ph of about 8.2, and a calcium level of about 400 ppm. Like most large polyp stony corals, a torch coral benefits from moderate water flow. The polyps will remain retracted and under-inflated if the water current is too fast because the large flowing polyps are prone to rip and tear in high or ultra-high current environments.
The torch coral is a photosynthetic coral, meaning it has a relationship with symbiotic zooxanthellae (single-cell photosynthetic organisms) that live inside its tissues that converts the light energy into sugar. In exchange for a home inside the coral, the zooxanthellae split their harvest and feed the coral. Therefore, it is possible to keep the Torch coral without any feeding at all. However, all corals are animals, and animals are meant to eat.
The best placement for a torch coral is in a location that gets moderate water flow and moderate-intensity lighting. Torches are aggressive corals that protect themselves by wielding their sweeper tentacles maliciously. Sweeper tentacles are specialized tentacles that extend much larger than the typical tentacles and are equipped with stinging cells. Torches will send out these long tendrils to zap anything nearby within reach.
 
very hard to tell type of aussie as your light is very blue in pic.
Torch do best in lower third of tank but keep it off of sandbed which sand can irritate it.
One of the biggest problems I have seen beginner hobbyists have is failing to account for the calcium demand for these corals. If there is insufficient calcium in your aquarium water, these corals will not be able to make their coral skeleton. You should also never lift a torch coral out of the water if you can avoid it. You could tear the polyps, and torn polyps are prone to infection followed by necrosis
Torch require typical parameters including a temperature around 78 degrees, a specific gravity of about 1.025, ph of about 8.2, and a calcium level of about 400 ppm. Like most large polyp stony corals, a torch coral benefits from moderate water flow. The polyps will remain retracted and under-inflated if the water current is too fast because the large flowing polyps are prone to rip and tear in high or ultra-high current environments.
The torch coral is a photosynthetic coral, meaning it has a relationship with symbiotic zooxanthellae (single-cell photosynthetic organisms) that live inside its tissues that converts the light energy into sugar. In exchange for a home inside the coral, the zooxanthellae split their harvest and feed the coral. Therefore, it is possible to keep the Torch coral without any feeding at all. However, all corals are animals, and animals are meant to eat.
The best placement for a torch coral is in a location that gets moderate water flow and moderate-intensity lighting. Torches are aggressive corals that protect themselves by wielding their sweeper tentacles maliciously. Sweeper tentacles are specialized tentacles that extend much larger than the typical tentacles and are equipped with stinging cells. Torches will send out these long tendrils to zap anything nearby within reach.
So it’s this a decent place? It’s off the sand but it’ll be at about a 45* angle. 94647C1B-6F10-43CF-94A6-59F0DA465D25.jpeg
 
So it’s this a decent place? It’s off the sand but it’ll be at about a 45* angle. 94647C1B-6F10-43CF-94A6-59F0DA465D25.jpeg
Elevate it. I keep my euphyllia 3-4" off the sand

1625613742332.png
 
Elevate it. I keep my euphyllia 3-4" off the sand

1625613742332.png
Wowzers!!! How do you get past the anxiety of things touching? Beautiful beautiful beautiful. I’ve got it about 3” off the sand as of 40 minutes ago. Here’s a shot in 50% blue 50% white on an AI prime 16hd.
does this help in identifying it? FCA322EB-2F70-4EA0-BFA2-406628967930.jpeg
My montipora is bouncing back, thanks so much for the advice you gave me the other day.
 
Wowzers!!! How do you get past the anxiety of things touching? Beautiful beautiful beautiful. I’ve got it about 3” off the sand as of 40 minutes ago. Here’s a shot in 50% blue 50% white on an AI prime 16hd.
does this help in identifying it? FCA322EB-2F70-4EA0-BFA2-406628967930.jpeg
My montipora is bouncing back, thanks so much for the advice you gave me the other day.
Looks happier. Got to 65% blue and 35% white and ramp up 5% Thursday, and another 5% Next Monday.
 
Looks happier. Got to 65% blue and 35% white and ramp up 5% Thursday, and another 5% Next Monday.
Can I just run my normal schedule? It’s the AB+ with the whites reds n greens toned down a bit and has a bit of david saxby up down movement.

oh yea, do you happen to know what type of torch it happens to be?
 
Youre gonna laugh when I tell you this, as it appears- Its aussie green tip purple torch. These are sensitive to light and you want to compromise and offer an acclimation light schedule and gradually increase it. It should be lower but I suggested a compromise light. Its up to you if you want to use AB schedule.
 
Youre gonna laugh when I tell you this, as it appears- Its aussie green tip purple torch. These are sensitive to light and you want to compromise and offer an acclimation light schedule and gradually increase it. It should be lower but I suggested a compromise light. Its up to you if you want to use AB schedule.
I’m gonna start an acclimation with a start point of 28% to full in the span of 2 weeks. I’ve been thinking of changing my light schedule. What do you suggest for a mix of LPS and SPS coral. It’s LPS dominant. This is and has been my schedule for a few months now. I’m totally open to suggestions. Everything liked the lighting except for my Rasta zoas. They refuse to open. 431F403A-0718-4AFD-A7E1-43FC8947E131.jpeg
 
Keep it near lower flow, and somewhere near the bottom for now. They can be conditioned to higher flow later on. Be careful handling it out of water, their skin is delicate and can tear which can lead to a bacterial infection and kill the colony. Yours reminds me of my old gold aussie torch but I am not certain what yours is... you can also try posting this in the LPS forum
Silly me, I thought I selected the LPS forum.
 

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