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My Acan always has his little tentacles out. Does this mean he is not getting enough nutrition from the lights or do they do this because they are happy?
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Okay thanks. I know he is a little bleached but that's my fault. I just figured out the intensity of my LEDS was a tad high lol :/They are feeder tentacles but it does not imply the they are "hungry", its just part of their natural behavior. That acan looks fat and happy.
So I need to start target feeding them then? What do you feed ? I have all mostly LPS in my tank.I have a small colony among others and their tentacles are out even more than your MOST of the time I see them are out even when the lights are off. I had previous experience that when they do this and you don't target feed them for a few weeks, they die. People told me I don't need to feed acans but I have lost a few acans frags this way......I target feed my acans weekly or whenever i feel like and for the last year or 2 I have not lost any of them.
Thanks for the info. I have honestly never heard of this before.With the Acan getting a little bleached from your LED and it is probably needing to make up for the lost zooxanthellae so it needs supplemental feeding. The best way is to blow off your rocks and around the rocks that are touching the substrate. Do a small amount daily till it colors up. Detritus is super nutritious and doing this feeds your corals and cleans your tank. It is like when you get a storm that kicks things up. Mine pretty much always have them extended as they are greedy feeders. I never target feed them but use the Detritus method a few times a week.
[emoji15] wow, I appreciate all the info. Thanks a lot. I believe my colony is in a good place. I have an older picture I'll post of the whole tank. There's some new rock I just added in this picture and my Hammer and frogs pawn are darker in color now.I have been in the hobby for a long time. lol
Zooxanthellae is typically the primary source of food for corals. The others are active feeding like when the tentacles are out, uptake of dissolved organics through the tissue and cell walls will typically make up the other portion of how they gain nutrition. Each coral species will vary in what their primary and secondary mode of feeding will be. Most corals will use a combination of active feeding, uptake of nutrients and Zooxanthellae. Some corals need more active feeding while others require very little over what the byproducts that Zooxanthellae provide. So when a coral bleaches it exudes the Zooxanthellae as a response to the stress. Till the coral can increase the density of Zooxanthellae it will have to utilize the other feeding modes to make up for the loss of energy. Active feeding being one of the best ways to make up for this with size of food being important. Detritus is a form of bacterial plankton because of its composition of what it is made up of. Organic matter, fish poop, uneaten food and the bacteria that try to break it down make up Detritus. So it is a perfect size for most corals to eat. Keep in mind that when a coral is stressed they need to be as efficient as possible in energy usage and not waste energy. So small particles of food like Detritus is easily up-taken and requires little overhead to process as it will typically get up-taken through the cell walls. Larger food items like pellets, mysid and brine shrimp take more energy to process. The coral needs to open then close the tentacles and then digest the food whereas foods like Detritus don't need to close the tentacles or get converted into usable food. Thereby reducing the metabolic cost that larger food items need for processing VS not needing to process and always having the tentacles open and in feeding mode. So you increase the up time of feeding time because they are always open vs large food items that need to close. Creating down time because they are closed.
We use to keep dendrophilia coral and Dendronephthya sp by having a deep sand bed and we would stir them a little twice a day or have a power head pointing at the substrate and have it turn on and off a few times a day.
I feed very little other foods for my corals as I feel why add food when you already have plenty in the tank that is the appropriate size and is nutrient dense. Just don't overdue it and overly disturb things so you don't affect your bacteria layers in the substrate or release trapped gas if you have a Deep sand bed. Your corals will love you for it trust me.