so lm being in San Diego, AQUA SD is a local coral shop for me. They have these Solomon island torch. And I spend a lot of time in their back going through each one individually and very few of them have any white meaty bands compared to what we look for with other torch where we look for a nice thick band. I was told wild sol end that they do not always have white meaty bands around their polyp heads. I find it quite odd, though that the Solomon Island torch can retract to the point of where you think they're dead. At night time the polyps are retracted to where the coral surface is hard and to me that means the torch is dead. This happened with one of the Solomon island torch on the bottom of my tank , it completely became a hard coral and I went to return it and they gave me store credit, but I accidentally brought it home again and put it back in the tank and the polyps came out again. Very odd. I'm just wondering if this is unique to the Solomon Island wild torch. Where they can retract the polyps and become hard coral which would in most cases be the equivalent of death in most torch varieties. if you look at the first image on the left, it looks like a dead torch but a few hours later there it is all puffy. The one in the bottom is a different one. Also that's the one I returned because I thought it was dead, but it's very much alive. but maybe I'm wrong, I think most people would look at the torch on the top picture center and think that is a dead torch. If my $600 holy Grail torch felt hard like that I would have a conniption.


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