Fungai coral advise

goodtimes

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I have this fungia plate coral that I nearly lost a couple months ago. It is now doing much better but has some algae growth where there was exposed skeleton. Do I just let nature takes it coarse or maybe gently peel or brush away algae?
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Tab28

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I believe the flesh will not grow where algae is. If it were mine i would use tweezers to remove as much algae as i could. Dip it and place it in a low light area. Algae can not grow if light is too low. While on subject of algae what is your phosphate level?
 
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goodtimes

goodtimes

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I spent some time with tweezers removing the algae. I'll have to wait and see how it heels up. It looks good this morning though.
 

Tab28

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Plates heal pretty fast as long as you can keep the algae off the skeleton. The care is the same but to me it actually looks like a cycloseris and not a fungia. If the center is raised. Fungia is completely flat.
 
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goodtimes

goodtimes

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Plates heal pretty fast as long as you can keep the algae off the skeleton. The care is the same but to me it actually looks like a cycloseris and not a fungia. If the center is raised. Fungia is completely flat.

Cycloseris is correct, I didn't know this. Thanks for pointing it out.
 

tyler1503

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Cycloseris also lack a "scar" on the underside as they don't start life out attached to a rock as fungias do :)
 
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goodtimes

goodtimes

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A google search shows there are 18 species of fungias.

Fungia, or plate corals, are free-living corals that consist of one large polyp and usually a single mouth. There are 18 recognized species of Fungia, all from the Indo-Pacific,1 and another 10 species of Cycloseris, a very similar, though usually physically smaller, genera of plate corals. A few species of plate corals are easy to tell apart, but many would be difficult for the casual aquarist (like me) to distinguish. A careful examination of the bleached out skeleton might be necessary for proper identification.

I found the terms seem to be mixed a lot while searching vendors sites at corals for sale.
 

Tab28

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It is. Cycloseris and fungia at quick glance look very much alike. The raised mouth area in cycloseris may not be evident when young. I have been to several LFS where they are mis-marked. That is not a biggie, since they are still plates and care is the same. Some LFS did not even know of cycloseris. I also have two diaseris plates, know commonly as fragile plates. One is very uncommon in color. Red and teal green. Kinda like a bleeding apple effect.
 

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