Little Shop of Coral
Ultra Plate Coral - 6 Inch (Fungia spp.) (A39)
Ultra Plate Coral - 6 Inch (Fungia spp.) (A39)
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Fungia, or plate corals, are free living LPS that sit on the sand bed rather than attaching to rockwork. They are mobile, capable of inflating dramatically, and very responsive to feeding. A great choice for a sand bed display piece with personality.
Why we love it
• Free living, sits unattached on the sand bed
• Inflates dramatically when content
• Strong feeding response and steady growth
• A unique addition to a sandy reef display
Suggested parameters
• Temperature: 24 to 26°C (75 to 79°F)
• Salinity: 1.025 to 1.026 SG
• pH: 8.1 to 8.4
• Alkalinity: 8 to 10 dKH (stability matters most)
• Calcium: 400 to 450 ppm
• Magnesium: 1250 to 1400 ppm
• Nitrate: 5 to 20 ppm
• Phosphate: 0.03 to 0.12 ppm
Care and placement
• Difficulty: Easy to moderate
• Placement: Sand bed (do not glue or attach to rockwork)
• Lighting: Low to moderate
• Flow: Low to moderate (indirect)
Feeding
Plate corals are active feeders and benefit from regular feedings.
• Mysis, brine, small chunks of meaty foods, or coral pellets
• Target feed 1 to 2 times per week
• Place food directly on the surface, polyps will pull it in
Compatibility and spacing
Plate corals can move slowly across the sand, so give them open space.
• Avoid placement near aggressive sweeper corals
• Watch for the coral becoming trapped against rockwork (can damage tissue)
• Allow open sand bed real estate around the coral
• Reef safe with most fish (some fish may pick at fleshy tissue)
What you are buying
• You will receive: 1 Plate Coral frag
• Mounted on a frag plug or small tile
• For WYSIWYG listings: you will receive the exact frag shown. For non WYSIWYG listings: the frag will be similar to those pictured but each piece is unique.
Colour, pattern, and polyp size can vary between systems and may shift slightly during acclimation due to lighting, flow, and nutrient levels.

Collapsible content
LIGHT
LOW: Place coral at the bottom of the tank. Depending on the type, coral may need to be placed off sand and therefore mounted on a ceramic disc of piece of rock.
MEDIUM: Place coral at mid-range of the tank. Best placed/glued on top of a rock scape at mid-range height.
HIGH: Place coral from mid range to just below water level. SPS coral are shallow growing so they require and are able to tolerate intense light.
FLOW
LOW: Most soft coral do well with a small, gentle pulse. There are certain corals that can even be placed in areas of indirect flow, meaning places aside a rock structure or set into a entrance to a cave style space.
MEDIUM: Many LPS types of coral prefer medium pulse current. Most Euphyllia or corals that have more tissue structure connected to their skeleton, don’t like to be in a high flow area like the direct flow of the wave pump.
HIGH: Similar to high light, SPS enjoy being in some heavy current. Most LPS and SPS that branch encrust or plate prefer high flow that simulates the top water waves.
SKILL
ENTRY: While some may say beginner level, "Entry" is a good term to be used when starting out in the world of corals and marine life. Prior to adding livestock, you want to ensure that your reef has the proper parameters including zero levels of ammonia and nitrite. Seeing traces of nitrate in your waters is a good sign - just keep them at a lower level of 2ppm to 10ppm. Maintaining correct temperature and salinity are a huge factor to stable parameters. Starting to monitor your PH, alkalinity, calcium and magnesium is a great habit to get into to keep a successful reef.
While some soft coral don’t require too much light, having a proper reef light that puts out the proper pars is very important. You'll also want to have a good amount of flow and protected rock areas, as placing corals in their happy spot is ideal for success.
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