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  #11  
Old 01-19-2013, 09:17 PM
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funny how i was told the same thing by the same person ....here i am now with a blueberry thats twice the size it was when i bought it , fully encrusts and full polyps day and night.......i guess mines gonna die too though right??

daniella does have merit to her post these corals need live food in the microns and feed several times a day ( all day is better )


succeess with this coral is not as rare as alot of people think.

cheers

I'd love to pick your brain on how to sucessfully feed your NPS corals, I've been in awe at the dendros, suns, gorgs and fan pics that you've posted and wanted to know your secret.


Cheers



Steve
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  #12  
Old 01-19-2013, 10:42 PM
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Originally Posted by somewherebeyondthesea View Post
I'd love to pick your brain on how to sucessfully feed your NPS corals, I've been in awe at the dendros, suns, gorgs and fan pics that you've posted and wanted to know your secret.


Cheers



Steve
hi steve

would be my pleasure

before going nuts on nps corals make sure your tank is stable , nutrient export is higher than nutrient import, and that you can offer a variety of foods including live and prepared.

pre plan your tank alot of these corals need food 24/7 and daily maintanace

one of the main things to understand is that most nps corals have daily needs so be prepared to work daily on them , on top of that a few slip ups in food feedings can mean weeks of acclimation to bring them back.

pm me for any more info that you need

cheers

denny
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Old 01-19-2013, 11:24 PM
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Really? that's cool! How long have you got it and what are you feeding it and how often? rotifers?

Success with this coral need a dedicated NPS tank, no less.

So far you would be the first that I know who not only had success maintaining it alive but actually making it grow! wow...

do you have pics that tank?

I was thinking eventually to put up a small NPS tank but darn it's expensive.

Also do you use a chiller? since most of those NP grow in deeper water...??

Another very important factor that I was told by a marine biologist is that the way the gorgone is transported and kept until it reach a proper tank is very determinant to its survival long term and a blueberry that would have been at high temp during shipping would have poor chance of survival.





Quote:
Originally Posted by reefwars View Post
funny how i was told the same thing by the same person ....here i am now with a blueberry thats twice the size it was when i bought it , fully encrusts and full polyps day and night.......i guess mines gonna die too though right??

daniella does have merit to her post these corals need live food in the microns and feed several times a day ( all day is better )


succeess with this coral is not as rare as alot of people think.

cheers
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  #14  
Old 01-20-2013, 12:00 AM
reefwars reefwars is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by daniella3d View Post
Really? that's cool! How long have you got it and what are you feeding it and how often? rotifers?

Success with this coral need a dedicated NPS tank, no less.

So far you would be the first that I know who not only had success maintaining it alive but actually making it grow! wow...

do you have pics that tank?

I was thinking eventually to put up a small NPS tank but darn it's expensive.

Also do you use a chiller? since most of those NP grow in deeper water...??

Another very important factor that I was told by a marine biologist is that the way the gorgone is transported and kept until it reach a proper tank is very determinant to its survival long term and a blueberry that would have been at high temp during shipping would have poor chance of survival.

hi daniella

ive had it for about 6 mths , i know its not long term compared to most corals but for this species 6 mths is pretty successfull.

i run a 24 hr feed although its a mixed reef, i feed in particular for the blueberry ( live phyto morning and night, a full line of fauna marin, coral smoothie and several zeo products.

you mentioned a couple of key points one is the temp i keep my tank at 76 (lower at night) any higher and all my touchy nps corals kinda get ****ed.

one thing ive noticed about the blue is when i turn the flow up on my mp10 the gorg shuts down , so ime its low to moderate flow.

lights ive found are not an issue provided algae doesnt grow.

polyps are all day but its feeds at times throughout the day , how much it takes is anyones guess but i do know that large food or most prepared meaty foods are no good.

also i tried to rescue a blueberry from someone else and it was a lost cause , im assuming that when these go downhill there no coming back, my experience im sure like others for recobery is non existent.


theres a few people on rc who have had them for a couple of years , one guy even frags his reguarily.

ive tried 3 before success (if you can call it that) and all three died within a few mths.

mine now is about 7-8' was about 4" when i got it about 6 mths ago.

i feed via two dosers 1l of foods a day to a 25g tank....this obviously cause water nutrient issues but i do 50% water changes ( sometimes more and every now and then up to %100) plus i run very aggressive gfo in large amounts change very frequently.

nitrates are always there but phos remans low.

i keep similiar water parameters to other reeftanks as this is a mixed reef.


i use to feed by hand and feeding would have to take place several times a day, it was hit or miss on whether or not polyps stayed out all day, since adding the feeder its out all day.

i think its important to aquire a heathy eating specimen if anyone wants to try their best at keeping one.

if i dont fill the doser then the blueberry shuts down and its alot of work to bring it back out( hand feeding )


there are pics in my bonsai build of the gorg .

besides the blueberry gorg i keep carnations,gorgs,dendros,tubes,anemones and some others.

the system is full mixed reef including some high end sps , i find having other corals in the tank motivates me to keep water quality good consistently


keeping this and other hard to keep species is easier then it use to be as we are finding better foods to feed them

cheers

denny
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Old 01-20-2013, 12:07 AM
reefwars reefwars is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by somewherebeyondthesea View Post
Here is a picture!


[/IPapp

in this picture the blueberry is shut down and may take some work to get it to come out.

nps corals do not get energy from photosynthesis , so they need to get their energy from captured prey(not new info i know)

no food is no energy.....

if they use energy to bring out their polyps but dont get food then its energy wasted that needs to double up the next time they come out , if this happens too much they shut down.

some nps will eat them selves inside out as a last attempt to not starve.


this species is not an easy coral it requires daily attention and one little slip up could mean hand feeding for hours every day.

best left to dedicated feed systems





basically
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Old 01-20-2013, 12:11 AM
reefwars reefwars is offline
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my latest pic:





another pic:








the one i rescued but died one week later

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  #17  
Old 01-20-2013, 12:27 AM
reefwars reefwars is offline
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Originally Posted by daniella3d View Post

Another very important factor that I was told by a marine biologist is that the way the gorgone is transported and kept until it reach a proper tank is very determinant to its survival long term and a blueberry that would have been at high temp during shipping would have poor chance of survival.

i missed this when i read it earlier but i think this is a huge factor probably the deciding factor on whether or not it survives long enough to acclimate to the foods we offer and tank conditions.

the first three i bought were small mounted frags(probably the sellers attempt to get some money back on a coral half melted while he can ) and i believe their faith was already written before i bought them , my healthy one looked great in the store,was grown on to the base, was a fresh arrival and had a blue base and blueish stalk( traits that people believe on rc nps forumns are signs of healthy piece)

when they are healthy their branches are thick and lots of polyps , as they starve their branches get very thin and polyps go from maybe 20 per 3" to 3-4 per 3"............its sad watching one starve
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Old 01-20-2013, 03:08 AM
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that's some major growth...must be a very large tank

"mine now is about 7-8' was about 4" when i got it about 6 mths ago."


just wondering though, how large do they get in nature? do you know?
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