Soft Coral ID?

bigtimereef

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Hi everyone,

I just recently moved a 60 gallon SW tank from someone who couldn’t take care of it anymore and was curious if anyone could help me ID these soft coral species. I’ve been taking care of a few reef tanks for about a year, but this is the first reef tank that I’ve owned myself. Thanks!

IMG_7416.jpeg IMG_7417.jpeg
 

RockBox13

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Zoas don't have stalks like that, only palys do and paly stalks are not that long.
They do when a rock is placed on top of them for a long time which is what it looks like happened here. If you’ve never seen zoanthids reach for light, that’s what it looks like. Check the picture. I rest my case
 

BristleWormHater

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They do when a rock is placed on top of them for a long time which is what it looks like happened here. If you’ve never seen zoanthids reach for light, that’s what it looks like. Check the picture. I rest my case
Way to many tentacles to be zoas aswell. I'd say the polyps are too big too
 
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bigtimereef

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ISpeakForTheSeas

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First picture is maybe a kind of palythoa?
Second Pic looks like a type of mushroom
@ISpeakForTheSeas
I'd say either unusual anemones of some kind or a very unusual species from an uncommon genus in the Zoanthidae family (not duncans as they're not branching at all, not snake polyps - Isaurus tuberculatus - because the tentacles are wrong for those, though it's possible it's another species in the genus).
 

rayadog

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I'd say either unusual anemones of some kind or a very unusual species from an uncommon genus in the Zoanthidae family (not duncans as they're not branching at all, not snake polyps - Isaurus tuberculatus - because the tentacles are wrong for those, though it's possible it's another species in the genus).
Yay for overarching zoanthid family name that includes palythoas
 

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