Different colour leathers

Some of them won't open in the day but others will adjust to your feeding pattern, I found some even open and close through the day. With this coral being such an aggressive eater it shouldn't take much coaxing. The way I do it is to turn off the pump and use a turkey baster with a bit of zooplanktosM and reef snow and squirt it around them, after this it usually take them about 15 minutes to open fully.

The reason they open at night in the wild is because the plankton is more abundant in the water.
 
No I don't think reef snow is the right food for it I use reef snow but just as a combonation with the plankton. As Lord Blackadder mentioned most of them feed on phytoplankton, and I think some of them feed on zooplankton as well although I'm not sure about the zooplankton.
 
What brand is that.
The one I use just has proteins derived from marine organisms, lipids, carbonates of calcium, magnesium and strotinum. A lot of people actually argue that it is not really a good food and causes a lot of nitrates, I just use it because it gets my son coral and other nps to open quickly.
 
Brightwell Aquatics Reef Snow - Replicates Marine Snow in all Marine Aquaria 500ml / 17oz Information


Overview
Complex of carbonate-bound, non-conservative major, minor, and trace elements in aragonite ratios, as well as marine-derived proteins and lipids in coral tissue ratios.
Simultaneously delivers appropriate inorganic and organic nutrients required by stony corals, both zooxanthellate and azooxanthellate soft corals, gorgonians, clams, tube worms, sponges, tunicates, and other suspension-feeding invertebrates for growth of both soft tissue and skeletal material.
Ideally fed at night when most corals extend their tentacles for prey-capture.
Does not require refrigeration.
Formulated by a marine scientist.


Technical Background
Marine snow is a term coined by oceanographers to describe aggregate particulate material (which may or may not be organic) falling towards the sea floor; the material, itself, is largely composed of the remnants of deceased zooplankton and large phytoplankton. These organic particles typically become colonized by various microorganisms (primarily bacteria and protozoans) during their descent towards the sea floor; the decomposition of the organic material by the microorganism “colony” on each particle recycles the nutrients locked up within it. The constant descent of these particles through the water column has the appearance of snow fall, hence the name “marine snow”. While marine snow is primarily associated with productive regions of the open ocean rather than tropical coral reefs, the concept (with some improvements adressing the requirements of reef-building organisms) may be applied to reef aquaria as a means of simultaneously delivering organic and inorganic nutrients to corals and other suspension-feeding invertebrates. Brightwell Aquatics Reef Snow effectively replicates the concept of marine snow by combining a “core substrate” of carbonate-bound, non-conservative major, minor, and trace elements (all in aragonite ratios) with marine-derived proteins and fatty acids (all in coral tissue ratios). It does not contain any sugars or their derivatives. Reef Snow delivers both organic and inorganic nutrients to corals and their allies, clams, tube worms, and other suspension-feeding marine invertebrates; it may be of particular benefit to the hobbyist wishing to maintain azooxanthellate soft corals in deep-water biotope aquaria. The collective benefits of providing these nutrients in the same “package” are increased growth rates of both soft tissue and skeletal material.
Reef Snow does not require refrigeration, however storage in a cool, shaded area will prolong the shelf-life. Refrigeration will maximize the shelf-life of the product.
 
I see what you mean but when they say deaceased, they mean rotting:lol: this stuff smells bad.
I would think if this is the only thing you are feeding it, it is sure to cause a nutrient build up problem.
I would rather feed it phytoplankton and zooplankton straight but thats just my opinion.
 
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