When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: tank raised soft corals for sale

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Aquaculture of coral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquaculture_of_coral

    Coral is also farmed by scientists for research, by businesses for the live and ornamental coral trade, and by private reef aquarium hobbyists. Coral reef farming involves extracting a part of a coral colony or free-floating larvae from a reef, and growing them in a nursery until outplanting [5] would be successful.

  3. Alcyonium coralloides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcyonium_coralloides

    Like other soft corals, Alcyonium coralloides is a suspension feeder. The polyps spread their pinnate tentacles wide and passively gather zooplankton and organic particles from the water flowing past. [3] By colonising gorgonians, Alcyonium coralloides is raised above the surface of the substrate. This is advantageous to it as the water flow ...

  4. Reef aquarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reef_aquarium

    A 14-litre (3-gallon) nano reef containing small and large polyped stony corals, as well as various soft corals. A nano reef is a type of marine aquarium that is typically less than 140 litres (30 Imperial gallons / 37 US gallons). The exact limit that distinguishes a nano reef from a regular reef is somewhat ill-defined.

  5. Litophyton arboreum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Litophyton_arboreum

    Litophyton arboreum, also known as broccoli coral, is a common soft coral found from the Red Sea to the Western Pacific. It grows up to 80 cm, usually on seaward reef slopes or hard bottoms. The color of L. arboreum varies from pale olive-green to yellow or grey. L. arboreum are anthozoans in the order Alcyonacea in the family Nephtheidae.

  6. Dendronephthya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dendronephthya

    Dendronephthya is a genus of soft corals in the family Nephtheidae. [2] There are over 250 described species in this genus. They are sometimes kept in aquariums, but are notoriously difficult to keep, requiring a near constant supply of small foods such as phytoplankton.

  7. Coralliidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coralliidae

    Coralliidae, also known as precious corals, is a taxonomic family of soft corals belonging to the suborder Scleraxonia of the phylum Cnidaria. [1] These sessile corals are one of the most dominant members of hard-bottomed benthic environments such as seamounts, canyons and continental shelves. [2]