Description:
The Aquacultured Pink Polyp Montipora Capricornis is an olive green colored Montipora capricornis with pink polyps. The contrast adds depth and texture to the aquacultured Montipora Capricornis giving a nice visual center piece in your tank. This cap is the fast-growing variety, it has a slightly bumpy texture and a delicate skeletal structure. A nice touch to this coral is with the plating growth staying relatively flat giving you great viewing. ORA also notes the Pink Polyp Cap gets its coloration shows off the best when under moderate to low lighting Montipora corals come in so many different forms and colors. This light green Montipora is dotted with electric Pink polyps and heavy actinic lighting will make them glow like neon. Its best to place this beautiful coral low in the rock work, so that it won’t shade any animals growing underneath its horizontal structure. Also called a Vase coral by some, montipora corals come in many colors and grow into the most beautiful shapes. Aquacultured Montipora Capricornis are one of the easier SPS corals to grow and maintain. They grow fairly quick in an established reef aquarium.
Difficulty Easy
Aggressiveness Peaceful
Water-flow
This coral requires moderate to high water flow
Lighting
This coral requires moderate lighting (PAR 200-300) (at least 3 watts per gallon), to maintain its color. T5's, Metal Halides, or LED's can all grow sps when the proper levels are provided. We recommend a 14-20K color spectrum for best coloration.
Placement
.Place this one on an exposed area of rock or ledge in the aquarium where it will receive direct flow and light. Montipora Capricornis will grow beautiful into the most beautiful shaped colonies.
Diet and Feeding
This coral is photosynthetic. Meaning a good portion of its nutrition comes from the algae zooxanthellae, through the light they receive. We recommend additional feeding weekly for faster growth. Feed a micro-plankton reef aquarium food designed for filter feeding invertebrates. Target feeding gets the corals fed using less food while keeping your nitrates and phosphates lower.
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