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With super green zoas spreading on the top of a clam shell.
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Growing and spreading onto the rockwork. I think it thrives in low light due to the large amount of phytoplankton that I feed.
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This pally used to have long tentacles, but they have become shorter and the disk has become larger. Not sure why.
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| Album By: Tally and Chris Fells
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On the hunt.
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No, I don't know how to spell that. LOL
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This snail seems to eat a good bit of algae, and looks really cool.
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Orange and white girl, and black and white boy.
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Our clown pair host everything in the tank. And I really do mean EVERYTHING, including the Crocea Clam. However, they are particularly fond of nestling in this torch coral.
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Picture taken in morning when the frog spawn is just 'waking up'. It is often about three times this big in the afternoon.
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Sometimes the smallest corals are my favorite.
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These candy cane corals were rescued from a store (as many of our corals are) where they had broken from a colony and were half burried in the sand. They are recovering well.
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Out of hiding at feeding time.
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Side view.
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Yet another type of encrusting coral.
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"Are My Polyps Showing?"
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Strange thing was on a new quarantined coral. Decided it probably shouldn't go into tank.
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Hubby kept a tank of Aiptasia to show methods of how to get rid of them for a CAS presentation.
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