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Green Plate Coral

Commonly mistaken in the coral world as an anemone, Green Plate Coral consists of rounded flat skeletal disk with long tentacles extending from the top. These tentacles are often brown or green in color, sometimes with brightly colored tips. The slightly rarer version of this type of coral is the Green Plate Coral. It is a Large Polyp Stony (LPS) coral, and is often referred to as Heliofungia Plate, Mushroom, or Disk Coral, and is closely related to the Fungia family.

Green Plate Coral Care

Green Plate Coral is considered to be fairly delicate, and care must be taken when aquarists attempt to successfully keep it in a captive reef. This type of coral prefer low to moderate water flow, with optimum being enough to lightly wave its tentacles. Care has to be exercised when removing the coral from the water, to keep from tearing the delicate tissues on the sharp sepia.

Green Plate Coral Characteristics

Green Plate Coral polyps are solitary, free-living (except for juveniles) and flat with a central mouth. Their polyps are amongst the largest of all corals. Tentacles are generally extended day and night and are quite long, similar to those of anemones. The color ranges from a blue-green to a brilliant metallic green in better specimens.

Green Plate Coral Feeding

Green Plate Coral is completely photosynthetic and requires no direct feeding in the captive environment. However, aquarists have found that it does react to the occasional feeding of shrimp or other meaty bits. The plate coral mouth can open wide to allow it to consume surprisingly large prey organisms if they are present in the water.

Green Plate Coral Aggressiveness

Green Plate coral is actually categorized as a highly aggressive type of coral. This type of coral packs quite a powerful sting similar to an anemone, and this is aggravated by the fact that it has a habit of moving itself around the aquarium. Green Plate CoralThe best way to force the plate coral to stay in one place is to use small rocks to prevent its wandering, as it can and will sting other creatures within the tank.

Green Plate Coral Tank Placement

Green Plate Coral should be place at the bottom of the tank in the sandy substrate. Penning with rocks is a good idea to prevent it from inflating its tissues and moving freely about the tank and stinging its fellow reef mates. Maintaining the correct calcium levels in the marine tank is very important for skeletal development.


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