Need help with my Sunkist Zoa. Since I bought if from a fellow reefer it hasn't shown its skirt. It has been a 2 weeks now in my tank. Though other zoas and softies seems to be thriving. Here's a pic. TIA
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Is this always meaning it needs more light?I'm with TheEngineer; try a different location in the tank. Get it more light and better flow.
Is this always meaning it needs more light?
I don't see any obvious signs of a pest on it. Might just not like the lighting and/or flow it is getting try a different spot.

There is something about the environment where it currently sits that makes it less-than-happy. Maybe it's light. Maybe it's flow. Maybe it's both. But unlike anemones, these guys can't move about the tank on their own to find their happy place, so they need your help.
My experience with Zoas is that they do okay with less light, so I am inclined to think that yours is a flow issue.
In general, whenever you add a new coral to your tank place it at bottom and slowly acclimate to higher light. It just looks like it’s getting used to your tank. Do you have led? Did it come from a tank with t5? Sometimes when corals come from t5 or halide to an led tank it takes them some time to adjust
By the way they look I would move them to lower light for now. Zoas can handle flow pretty well. Even though they came from an led tank there's differences in spectrum and intensity from your tank to his.
Agree with DSC reef completely.
The reason I asked if it came from t5 to led is because those are more difficult transitions for corals but even from led to led it could be difficult on a coral since people keep different spectrums and intensities and that’s assuming that both led are the same exact model. Going from one brand of led to another is probably more stressful but not as bad as going from t5 to led. No matter the case, they need time to adjust and it could take many weeks in some cases. Best thing to do, as DSC reef suggests, is place them in lower light and slowly acclimate them.
Keep us posted.

