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Home > Search > Nano Tank Marine Life > Coral
Mushroom Coral - Rainbow Multi-Rock
Mushroom Coral - Rainbow Multi-Rock
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Price Elsewhere: $99.99
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Sale Price: $44.99
Savings: $55.00
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More Details
Tank Stats
Size: 6+ polyps
Care Level: Easy
Temperament: Mildly aggressive if place near other corals
Reef Safe: Yes
Diet: Light - Medium Flow, marine snow, plankton
Origin: Aquacultured in Indonesia
Acclimation Time: Temperate Acclimate
Coral Safe: Yes
Invertebrate Safe: Yes
Minimum Tank Size:
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With its vibrant color, the Rainbow Mushroom Coral Polyp looks awesome in any reef tank. These corallimorphs are covered with short tentacles which are colored in different and beautiful streaks of color. The Rainbow Mushroom Coral Polyp is very easy to maintain and can grow and propagate very easily in an aquarium. It is available either in multiples or singly that are attached to very petite pieces of rocks. The Rainbow Mushroom Coral Polyp has short tentacles which are club or berry shaped. It is semi aggressive in nature as compared to other marine aquarium invertebrates, and is recommended to keep the Rainbow Mushroom Coral Polyp away from other corals just to avoid the aggression in the aquarium. It needs low water flow and moderate illumination that can be placed anywhere in your marine aquarium. Often, you will find it closed when you introduce it into the tank. Once the Rainbow Mushroom Coral Polyp gets acclimated to the environment, it will open up within eight weeks? time. If there is bright light arrangement in the aquarium, the Rainbow Ricordea has to be kept at the bottom of the reef tank. It also shows symbiotic relationship with Zooxanthellae that dwells inside its tissues and provides nutrition to the coral. In return the corals provide shelter to these Zooxanthellae. Apart from the photosynthesis, it can also be fed with additional supplements of phytoplankton and shrimps for continued health growth. The Rainbow Mushroom Coral Polyp shows the beautiful color effects in presence of actinic lighting.
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This is an aquacultured mushroom rock. Each rock measures approx. 4-6 inches round and have a variety of mushrooms. Image is a representation and mushroom type will vary.Mushrooms are hardy and adaptable specimens, often being the first corals a new hobbyist will purchase for their tank.These invertebrates are made up of three distinct areas; pedal disk (used for attachment), stem and oral disk.These corallimorphs prefer less intense areas of lighting and flow. It has been noted that if the mushrooms are in placed in bright lighting- browning may occur.Propagation is quite easy provided the mushroom is placed in favorable conditions. Propagation occurs through (a) fission-splitting into more than one piece or by (b) budding which is a new mushroom "daughter" growing from the original mushroom.These invertebrates are mostly photosynthetic, they will however readily close the oral disk around any prey which strays onto the mushroom and be digested.Corals are part of a biological group known as Cnidaria. Most Cnidaria have a mouth, or mouths, that opens into one big body cavity. Due to the lack of a true digestive system, this cavity acts in its place and after the food is broken down the nutrients are then sent through the rest of the body as food. There is also no excretory system; therefore the waste is sent back through the mouth or secreted into the surrounding water.Tentacles of varying size will usually surround the mouth of Cnidaria. Most Cnidaria have tentacles with stinging cells that can shoot tiny poison darts into their prey or can even be used as a defense mechanism. Some corals lack tentacles and instead cover themselves with a thin layer of mucus and use that to collect bacteria and plankton as food. Some corals even use both of these methods. Cnidaria can either be an individual animal or members of a complex colony. These "Colony Corals" share the food and nutrients taken in by each individual.Corals have tiny living organisms that actually live in their tissue. These are called zooxanthellae and they are the reason why such strong lighting is needed in the saltwater aquarium. These algae-like creatures provide the coral with oxygen and other nutrients that are produced during photosynthesis. During this process, the zooxanthellae take up carbon dioxide and provide nutrients to the coral.Corals can use two different types of defense mechanisms. One of which is a sweeper tentacle wherein the coral reaches its tentacles out to try to damage another coral with nematocysts. The other is when the coral releases a minute amount of toxin into the water to poison another coral within certain proximity.
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All sizes listed are only approximate representations. All pictures and descriptions are generalizations and cannot be exact representations.