What-toFeed.com

what to feed maze brain coral

by Maymie Kulas Published 3 years ago Updated 2 years ago
image

The Brain Maze Coral can be fed at night when their tentacles are out or early morning when the lights first come on but this is not required if it is under proper aquarium conditions. If you want to feed the Maze brain coral, it can be fed meaty foods like brine shrimp, mysis shrimp, cyclopese or anything else meaty and small.

If you want to feed the Maze brain coral, it can be fed meaty foods like brine shrimp, mysis shrimp, cyclopese or anything else meaty and small.

Full Answer

What is the best tank for a brain maze coral?

Aquarium Parameters A well-feed live rock/reef environment is what is needed for your Brain Maze Coral, along with some fish for organic matter production. A mature tank is recommended.

Should I Feed my open brain coral targeted feeding?

I don’t recommend targeted feeding for open brain coral. It can consume a major part of energy via photosynthesis and absorb some directly from the water. Tip: use a protein skimmer and powerful filtration system to cure overfeeding side-effects. Even though filtration is a great tool, it doesn’t give 100% protection from bacterias.

What's wrong with the maze brain coral?

The brain corals are moderate to care for and high lighting and lack of feeding is the most common cause of their demise by beginners. The Maze Brain Coral and the rest of the Platygyra genus is best left to intermediate aquarists. Yes, my first question was why isn't this being stopped?

How do you care for an open brain coral?

You should bear in mind that open brain corals may be very subtle sometimes. Use sharp and clean tools to treat the flesh of the coral. Plus, these corals are slow-growers. It takes much more time for the species to grow compared to other corals.

image

What does brain coral eat?

zooplanktonGrooved brain corals also filter feed and eat small zooplankton and other prey from the water column. This food provides them with additional energy and provides their symbiotic algae with the necessary nutrients to continue to generate food.

What do you feed open brain corals?

Active Member. LPS love anything meaty, including krill, mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, and even pieces of dinner shrimp if the coral is large enough.

How do you take care of brain coral?

They do best in a well established reef aquarium that incorporates moderate to strong lighting with a moderate water current, along with the addition of calcium, strontium, and other trace elements to the water. Allow ample space between it and other corals, as it will sometimes sting its neighbors.

Where do I put the maze in coral?

Placement: Mount the Alien Maze Brain using IC gel glue, or putty, on an exposed rock or ledge in the lower two- thirds of the aquarium where they will receive moderate currents and low to moderate lighting. Leave 2-3" around this coral as it has tentacles that can sting nearby corals at night.

Are brain corals easy to keep?

These corals are tolerant of higher than ideal phosphate and nitrate levels, this is what makes them easy to keep. We always recommend keeping your aquarium within natural sea water parameters.

Are brain corals Hardy?

This hardy stony coral is common in the trade and easy to maintain in aquariums if placed in the correct location. This would be an area that receives gentle water flow and moderate light. Those that are red in color should be placed in shady areas or at least areas receiving indirect light.

How long can brain coral live?

900 yearsThe cerebral-looking organisms known as brain corals do not have brains, but they can grow six feet tall and live for up to 900 years! Found in the Caribbean, Atlantic, and Pacific Oceans, brain corals display what is known as Meandroid tissue integration.

Can you touch brain coral?

Remember, do not touch the reef. Contact with the coral will damage the delicate coral animals.

Do brain corals move?

Brain corals grow in warm water that is clear and shallow, usually less than 250 feet deep. Because they are attached to the ground and cannot move, corals are sensitive to changes in water temperature and water quality in the places where they live.

How big do open brain corals get?

Open brain corals can be solitary or colonial. They are small corals, rarely reaching over 20 cm in diameter. They are free-living and exhibit a flabello-meandroid growth form, meaning they have distinct valley regions separated by walls.

Are brain corals photosynthetic?

Open Brains are photosynthetic corals, meaning they get nutrients from the products of photosynthesis carried out by symbiotic dinoflagellates called zooxanthellae living in their flesh.

How do brain corals grow?

Structure and Growth Their structure is made of calcium carbonate, or limestone, which hardens into a rock-like exoskeleton. These skeletal structures become cemented together to form a sphere that gives brain corals their shape. Brain corals grow very slowly as each generation adds to the limestone skeleton.

How do open brain corals reproduce?

They will reproduce by forming small polyp buds at the base of the parent colony. Upon the death of one Trachyphyllia, new daughter colonies emerged a few months later from the septa (teeth on the inside of the corallite wall) of the parent coral.

What do brain maze corals eat?

Feed rotifers, newly hatched brine shrimp, mysis, and zooplankton type foods, including foods for filter feeders. They do need to be fed at the very least, once a week, and grow quite well with regular feedings.

What color is a Platygyra brain maze coral?

The colors are gray or yellow to brown with green or cream centers. Difficulty of Care. Platygyra Coral Care: A Brain Maze Coral or Maze Coral is moderate to care for. They are not as hardy as other members of the Flaviidae family, and are more likely to bleach and have tissue loss from stress.

What are some common names for maze coral?

Some common names these corals are know for are Maze Brain Coral, Brain Coral, Closed Brain Coral, Ridge Coral, Worm Coral, Maze Coral, Brain Worm Platygyra Coral, and Green Maze Coral. These corals are similar in appearance to the valley forming. Goniastrea. species, as well as the. Australogyra.

Where are Platygyra corals found?

genus are found in the Indo-West Pacific, the Red Sea to Madagascar, Egypt to Indonesia, Japan to New Caledonia and Australia, Mozambique, Somalia to Fiji, Ryukyu Islands to Australia and Indonesia, Philippines, Sri Lanka to Papua New Guinea. Platygyra Coral Habitat:

What color are corals?

corals. Typically, the walls are brown or dark gray with gray or green valleys though there is a wide variation of the colors. Colors include green, white, cream, pink, gray, and brown, and can have a bright or dull hues. Descriptions of the species most likely acquired in the aquarium trade:

Do brain corals need lighting?

The brain corals are moderate to care for and high lighting and lack of feeding is the most common cause of their demise by beginners. The Maze Brain Coral and the rest of the Platygyra genus is best left to intermediate aquarists.

What color are open brain corals?

Starting from those monochromatic green striped colonies to rainbow-like show-stopping colonies. Including yellows, reds, orange-like, and even pink.

Why does coral fade?

Bleaching is also known as discoloration. To put it simply — your coral is about to fade in color. This happens because of special algae which feed the coral. Under stress conditions, any coral expels the algae and switches to “economy” mode. When that happens, all unnecessary stuff suffers (like coloration)

What kind of fish are good companions for a reef?

A vivid example of reef-safe kind of fish could be goby, clownfish, angelfish, tang, mandarinfish, dragonettes, and etc.

What is the best level for calcium in the ocean?

Being a major ion in saltwater, calcium affects water quality a lot. In the oceans, its level hovers around 400 to 450 ppm. You should use the same range for open brain coral. I recommend you use 400ppm value as a starter. Then you may adjust that based on your observation. If coral feels lame, you may want to level up the value up to 450 ppm. Make sure to adjust calcium step-by-step though. Adding 5 or 10 ppm weekly is optimal.

wav3form

I bought a maze brain a few months ago and most of it seems to be doing well. However, there are some spots of bare skeleton and some reddish algae is starting to grow there. It's in a 20L with a 20L for a sump, 150w mh 10k HQI and 2xT5HO actinic. It's a mixed tank with a hammer coral, zoos, some sps and a gbta. All the other critters are great.

GoingPostal

I would shade it, is it platygra? I haven't tried one as they are reported to be kinda touchy and prone to recession over time in my Aquarium Corals book. I would check all water parameters, maybe something is slightly off and it's reacting to a stressor.

shaggydoo541

Two words... FEED IT!. My maze brain is the most demanding LPS I own. I've got other varieties of brain corals, blastos, acans, hammer, frog, duncan, branching flowerpot, chalices, and all of these LPS take quite a while to show issues when I get lazy and don't feed for a while. But my maze is quick to react to a change in my feeding schedule.

wav3form

Two words... FEED IT!. My maze brain is the most demanding LPS I own. I've got other varieties of brain corals, blastos, acans, hammer, frog, duncan, branching flowerpot, chalices, and all of these LPS take quite a while to show issues when I get lazy and don't feed for a while. But my maze is quick to react to a change in my feeding schedule.

wav3form

Here's my maze... you can see in the upper left some of the skeleton and redish algae.

shaggydoo541

Sorry to say but that brain is on its very last leg. Its going to be hard to bring that thing back. But if you do you will need to feed heavily. Nightly if your tank can handle it.

wav3form

Sorry to say but that brain is on its very last leg. Its going to be hard to bring that thing back. But if you do you will need to feed heavily. Nightly if your tank can handle it.

image
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9