What makes a chalice a chalice?

reefboy

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I always thought the Echinophyllia was what we are calling chalices but I'm seeing Oxypora's and Mycedium being called chalices now so what do the masses say? can we generalize these under the common term "chalice" or should there be a definite genius set with the pricing thats going on.
 
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reefboy

reefboy

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thats true but as I said should they be called chalices and be sold at the same prices?
 

joefish

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First chalice i bought was labeled mycedium. IMO chalice refers to any LPS that grows a plate like skeleton with flesh that expands. Monti cap with meat is another way to look at it.
 
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reefboy

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I think they should be valued the same.

I would agree with that but should they all be called chalices as my Monti cap grows very similar but we wouldn't call it a chalice I think these generalization can be more dangerous then high pricing to beginning collectors.
 

AquaWorldPSC

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Mycdiums, Oxyporas, and Echinos are very similar

Mycedium (Pic from Reeffarmers)
moz-screenshot-6.jpg
limited_mycediumrobokaki_seed.jpg

Oxypora (Pic from Reeffarmers)
limitedoxypora_colony.JPG

Echino (Pic from Reeffarmers)
limited_echinophyllia_red.jpg
 

Reef Pets

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Given photos like that, I can see the difference. But, a general catagory of Chalice seems to be the way to go. There are SOOO many species of coral in general that it would be impossible to keep up with if we looked that far into it.
 

returnofsid

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Along with Echinophyllias, you can add Echinoporas to the mix. They're also generically called a Chalice in a lot of cases. Here's a pic of one I recently got that was called an Echinopora. I'm not 100% sure that it is, but I believe so.
3220234419_97f5529743.jpg
 

freshfish

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Sometimes I just laugh. Were little kids going through phases. Micros, Aussie Acans, Now chalices!:) History does repeat its self!
 

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