Description
The Green Pineapple acropora gets the name from the short thick green branches shaped like a pineapple. This is a great hardy acropora species we have been growing out in out systems since around 2010. The coral is green throughout and grows in a pretty level tabling structure. Good to place in an area where fish are fed because they will not be able to break the thick branches.
Acroporas are one of the more challenging corals due to the fact chemistry levels need to be stable in order for this coral to do well. Regular testing of alkalinity and calcium are required. Flow needs to be alternating and strong. The colors will look great with good lighting, flow and certain nutrient levels.
Lighting: medium high – strong lighting 250-450 PAR.
Flow: medium – high
Care Level: intermediate- advanced
Original Location Range: Indonesia, Coral Triangle, South Pacific
Grown in our California coral farm where we provide zero impact corals
Water chemistry Calcium 400-450, Magnesium 1350, KH 7-9.5, pH 8.1-8.4, Nitrates .01-10, Phosphates .01-.1 salinity 1.026
Temperature Range: 74- 81 Fahrenheit
Dosing: Doc highly recommends automated dosing of Ca, Kh and other elements to provide ultimate stable water chemistry throughout the day. It is important there are no large fluctuation swings especially with Kh/alkalinity. For more information on dosing and products click here.
Placement recommendations: Acropora coral will do best in the upper 1/3 of the aquarium where light and flow is high. Best to have alternating flow in a back and forth motion.
Attachment: Use epoxy and reef glue or just reef glue for smaller fragments. Clip off as much of the plug or disc possible. Add a small amount of coral glue to the underside of the disk. Mix up enough two part epoxy to create a small mound and dab it a few times into the glue to get it tacky then press and mold a conical shape. Add a few small daps to the tip of the cone dabbing the glue so it really sticks to the epoxy. Press the coral disk onto the desired location and press the epoxy flat around the disk. Be sure the coral is fully secure, the coral should never fall off the reef.
Trouble shooting: Acros can and will brown out easy especially went first added to a new environment. Do not be alarmed if your colorful Acropora fragment browns out for a while. They will also brown out from any unstable levels, keeping consistent water parameters is best for the coral. Pests like acropora eating flatworms aka aefw will cause the coral to brown out and stress out. Keep an eye out for slow tissue necrosis and rapid tissue necrosis.
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