
Goniopora sp.
| Care Level | Moderate |
| Lighting | Moderate |
| Water Flow | Low to moderate |
| Placement | Low rock or sand |
| Aggression | Semi-aggressive |
| Coloration | Green, pink, purple, rainbow "flowerpot" polyps |
Overview
Goniopora (the “Flowerpot Coral”) extends a shimmering ball of long, daisy-like polyps that sway constantly in the current — mesmerizing and colorful. Once notoriously hard to keep, modern aquacultured and Australian Gonioporas are far more successful, and they are now a popular, rewarding LPS.
Care & Placement
Give moderate light and low-to-moderate flow. Place low on rock or on the sand. Stability is key — Goniopora dislike swings in parameters. Aquacultured/Australian specimens adapt far better than wild imports; a mature, stable tank helps.
Feeding
Photosynthetic and benefits greatly from feeding — target-feed fine foods (coral foods, phytoplankton, baby brine, amino acids) a couple of times a week to fuel the long polyps.
Propagation
Frag by cutting the encrusting base/skeleton; healthy colonies can be divided by experienced keepers.
Cautions
Historically difficult — buy aquacultured or Australian specimens, provide a stable mature tank, and feed regularly. Do not confuse with Alveopora (which has 12 tentacles per polyp vs Goniopora’s 24). Extends mild sweepers; give a little space.
