I've been missing a nice Classic Efflo Acro coral for some time, and was super lucky to trade for this jumbo colony grown out by Aqua Imports in Boulder Colorado.
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Giant? No. There are corals in the wild the size of cars.... trying to get YouTube views, eh?
Not super sure yet, didn't get that far, will enjoy it as is for now and will probably manage its size with amputations for its own goodis that thing going into a display tank?
Mike and I are veteran reefers and friends, we don't care about coral names, just that they are fun, colorful strains - no one has most of these strains because I collected them myself in Australia and Solomon Islandsthe article was posted, he really didnt get too much for it. in fact me personally think he got the raw end of the deal. if you watch the video 3/4 of it were inexpensive beginner corals.
If you watch the video, I weighed the coral, it's 15 pounds with no rock underneath.Man, a friend near me who owns a shop always has weird stories about the large corals he sells or trades. It’s never just cash, there is always a trade of some oddball non reef item involved to get rid of these large corals. I want to know what you traded to get it! And how heavy it is.
To be honest the real impetus to cut it some is to get more of the colorful growing edge - I've seen tank grown Efflos bigger than this and it's like two feet of meh bordered by a beautiful, vivid growing margin.I think these days you might have to share pics of a 6” tenuis colony to get a reaction. Only the really experienced reefers will appreciate an efflo colony this large. I hope it acclimated well for you since it can be hard to introduce such a large coral to a new tank while keeping it happy enough to continue to grow. I hope the intention was to get it to grow larger and not chop it up!
I've seen them in specific habitats in Bali and believe it or not, most colonies don't get this big in the wild due to storms, bleaching and periodic disturbances.Thats kind of a rude remark.
Sure there are massive ones in the wild but for being in captivity/ in a private hobbyist aquarium, thats a pretty huge efflorescens.
I've seen them in specific habitats in Bali and believe it or not, most colonies don't get this big in the wild due to storms, bleaching and periodic disturbances.
If you watch the video, I weighed the coral, it's 15 pounds with no rock underneath.
The lights are Acro Optics, locally made in Boulder, Colorado - kind of like a small batch hot rod LED light with some neat features you won't find in mass produced fixtures, like color touchscreens!Finally got time to watch the video, pretty cool! Awesome to see big efflo like that. A friend had a 500$ efflo that was close to that size but when he moved it to the shop aefw got to it sadly. The egg masses were like art because of all the flat area they had to work with haha. I like those lights the guy was using, are they the ones made in Australia? Either way they did that coral right. Thanks for making the video! I would love to see that immortal tort a little closer as well as some of the stuff you collected yourself.