Hello,
I am setting up my reef again after a hiatus. I would like fill some gaps in my knowledge base before I plan my stocking list.
I understand that most LPS are aggressive and send out long sweeper tentacles. I have read on-line more than once though that the sweepers of, for example, one frog spawn coral (euphyllia sp) will not harm another frog spawn coral.
Is this generally true for most species of LPS?
If it is true, how closesly do they need to be related -- euphyllia paradivisia vs euphyllia yaeyaaensis vs euphyllia ancora?
If it is true for most species of LPS, are there ones that it is defintely not true for? favites, elegance, echinophyllia, acanthastrea, blastomussa, montastrea, micromussa, euphyllia, etc?
If you can keep all LPS specimens spaced far enough from one another that sweeper tentacles are not an issue, are there certain species that just don't mix well with other LPS and should be in a dedicated species tank?
I appreciate any information you can give before I invest in new specimens. I have been reading many books on keeping captive corals, but sometimes a lot of the practical husbandry issues that do not deal directly with water chemistry, temperature parameters, flow and lighting are just missing.
Also, are echinophyllia aspera plating corals, encrusting corals, or a combination of both, kind of like montiporas? (I know the montis are SPS for whatever the difference in this classification is worth.)
Thanks so much!
Candy
I am setting up my reef again after a hiatus. I would like fill some gaps in my knowledge base before I plan my stocking list.
I understand that most LPS are aggressive and send out long sweeper tentacles. I have read on-line more than once though that the sweepers of, for example, one frog spawn coral (euphyllia sp) will not harm another frog spawn coral.
Is this generally true for most species of LPS?
If it is true, how closesly do they need to be related -- euphyllia paradivisia vs euphyllia yaeyaaensis vs euphyllia ancora?
If it is true for most species of LPS, are there ones that it is defintely not true for? favites, elegance, echinophyllia, acanthastrea, blastomussa, montastrea, micromussa, euphyllia, etc?
If you can keep all LPS specimens spaced far enough from one another that sweeper tentacles are not an issue, are there certain species that just don't mix well with other LPS and should be in a dedicated species tank?
I appreciate any information you can give before I invest in new specimens. I have been reading many books on keeping captive corals, but sometimes a lot of the practical husbandry issues that do not deal directly with water chemistry, temperature parameters, flow and lighting are just missing.
Also, are echinophyllia aspera plating corals, encrusting corals, or a combination of both, kind of like montiporas? (I know the montis are SPS for whatever the difference in this classification is worth.)
Thanks so much!
Candy