Marine Life UK - Mail order corals responsibly sourced at low prices - Caring For Catalaphyllia (Elegance Coral)

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Caring For Catalaphyllia (Elegance Coral)

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Class: Anthozoa, Subclass Hexacorallia, Order Scleractinia, Family Euphyllidae, Genus Catalaphyllia

Care of Catalaphyllia (Elegance Coral) - This care sheet will help you understand how to look after Catalaphyllia (Elegance Coral) - you can find Catalaphyllia (Elegance Coral) in the Large Polyp Stony Corals section of our Mail Order Corals.

Common names: Elegance coral

Sensitivity (Level 3 to 5): While these corals were once considered generally tolerant and easy to care for, in recent years they have been suffering from a condition commonly called “Elegance Coral Disease.” It’s not entirely clear if the Elegance coral disease is caused by an infectious agent, improper lighting/care, or a combination of the two.

Feeding: Elegance corals have strong prey capture ability and can feed on mysis shrimp and other similarly sized meaty marine aquarium foods.

Lighting (Level 4 to 8): Lighting requirements for these corals depend heavily on where the coral was collected. Recently collected corals from the Indo-Pacific are likely from deeper waters and should be kept under low to moderate lighting. Elegance corals more recently collected are likely from shallower waters where they have adapted to intense lighting. Though adaptable, it’s important not to put a coral from deeper water under intense lighting. Doing so is thought to be a possible cause of Elegance Coral Disease.

Water flow: Place this coral an area of moderate water flow.

Placement: Aggressive corals, they are best placed on a sand bed or other soft bottom with enough room for the long tentacles to fully extend without touching rocks or other corals. Do not keep with leather corals.

General: These corals enjoy slightly more "dirty" water than many other aquarium corals. Note that in the wild, these corals live in mud.

Elegance Coral Disease is characterized by a swollen polyp body, short stubby tentacles, and a general lack of normal behavior. It is not wise to purchase a coral appearing to be suffering. If you have a coral that appears to be suffering from this condition, moving it to lower light might help.