How long does xenia take to grow




















The best way I have found to propagate these is to place smaller rocks around the colony. When the Xenia spread onto those rocks you can just pull out the smaller rock and replace it. This way you do not have to mess around with trying to cut and stick them onto something else. They do like Iodine but mine have grown just fine without supplementing a whole lot.

I have medium flow and they are at the top of my tank soaking in watts of metal halide lighting. Denzil Linaker. May 18, 84 0 0. RE: I bought one attached to a shell. In my opinion you can just leave them to do there thing. Just place them next to where you want them to frag.

Feb 22, 3, 2 38 SC. Fortunately, Xenia is one of the easier corals to propogate once it becomes established in your tank. The rock garden around the main colony works well for getting frags off of it, or it'll just spread onto whatever it touches -- even the glass of your tank.

Since then it hasn't. It is still upright and doesn't look dead but it's cap looks small and the tentacles aren't extending:- Not enough flow? I am having small dinoflag. I guess I'll try to be semi-helpful It usually takes corals at least a week to become acclimated. Some corals go faster than others however. It could be pissed at the dinoflags though. Try moving it and see if that helps. Did you acclimate it? It could easily just be pissed off at the move.

I acclimated it and it's been in the tank for almost 2 weeks. Looks to have a little green algae on the crown too. I read that to get rid of dinos you should manually extract as much as you can every day and turn the lights off for a few days If there is a way to get rid of them without the turning off the lights I would rather do that. I don't want to stress out the new corals. The dinos aren't very bad, just a few strings here and there.

Dinos are a symptom of an imbalance, like a cycle for example. They are there for a reason. You must log in or register to reply here. Most reactions Latest Discussions. Update on Gert. FroFro 18 minutes ago Tropical Discussion. Replies 1 Views Replies 0 Views Today at PM Tropicanafishbanana.

Enter Now! Ammonia detected after water change. Replies 21 Views Today at PM Slaphppy7. Big tank placement - new gallon with sump. Replies 4 Views Today at PM Uberhoust. Tropical Fish Emergencies. New to the Hobby Questions and Answers. What I can say, about these reports, is that hobbyists recently scrubbed the rocks, as a result of the xenia overgrowth, which sort of suggests, in my mind that the Xenia was an indirect cause of the poisoning, rather than direct.

The threatened or damaged paly or zoanthid then releases the toxin either to protect itself from more damage or simply because the flesh that contained the poison was torn. I can see another scenario at play here where the X. Pulsing xenia coral is generally found in shallow waters, in strong light, and high tidal conditions.

In the wild, they have even been found to thrive in polluted waters. As for the area, they are naturally found in the Indo — Pacific area and the Red Sea. This soft coral species is thought to be tolerant of high nutrient loads, which is what makes them easy to care for in a typical beginner reef tank. They require a moderate amount of water movement. Too much water movement will prevent the polyps from opening and will make it harder for you to notice the rhythmic pulsing that gives them their name.

In the aquarium, I have found them to be a bit more fickle and harder to care for than the other descriptions have sometimes suggested.

When I first started out in the hobby, I tried to keep several different specimens with no luck. In a completely different tank setup, a few years later, I had some reasonable success and saw why this rapidly growing coral has a reputation for being a hardy, beginner coral.

If you want to grow this coral in your tank, one piece of advice is to try and locate it on an island in your tank. Pulsing Xenia is a rapidly growing, encrusting-type species that will creep along andy surface and grow new polyps. Therefore it is possible that over time, and left unchecked, an individual Pulsing Xenia coral could conceivably invade every piece of live rock in your tank.

Click here to read more about the most important aquarium water parameters. It seems intuitive that this coral, like most other corals, eats, but it is unclear how we help that along in the home aquarium. You will note, if you keep this coral, that it grows just fine without any additional feeding.

However, it is also worth noting that I have seen the best growth from this species earlier in my tank—likely when dissolved nutrient levels are high and there is not a lot of other competition for those nutrients. As the tank matured and water quality stabilized, and in the presence of some other leather coral species thriving Toadstools , Green Star Polyps, and Cabbage Corals , to name a few , polyp growth died back.

These corals would not sting nearby corals nor affect them in an aggressive chemical or stinging warfare kind of way.



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