gaberosenfield
Guest
UPDATE: @MichaelB picked up everything. He says he'll bring most of the corals (and live rock) to the upcoming frag swap. Thanks and I hope they all do well in your tanks!
Hi everyone,
Professor John Pringle at Stanford University is retiring, and his lab is shutting down. That means we need to get rid of all our corals, fish, and aquarium equipment. Everything is free, and the living things obviously have to go first. I don't have a complete list of all the corals we have and don't know their trade names, but I'm posting some pictures and listing the names of things I know. For now I'm just posting the living things. Equipment will come after the living things are gone.
Fish:
Note that the colors are pretty washed out under our metal halides, but they become much more intense when kept under LEDs in my personal aquarium.
DM me if you're interested. Note that I will be out of town June 22-July 2, so you probably can't pick anything up then. Everything will be first come, first served, and I will delete things from this post as they go. Also note that it may take some lead time to catch the fish, especially if most of the coral is still in the tank, so I'll need a few days notice if you want the fish.
Thanks,
Gabe
Hi everyone,
Professor John Pringle at Stanford University is retiring, and his lab is shutting down. That means we need to get rid of all our corals, fish, and aquarium equipment. Everything is free, and the living things obviously have to go first. I don't have a complete list of all the corals we have and don't know their trade names, but I'm posting some pictures and listing the names of things I know. For now I'm just posting the living things. Equipment will come after the living things are gone.
Fish:
- Tomato clownfish, Amphiprion frenatus. Unknown age. Certainly female by now, ~4" long.
- Damselfish, maybe Amblyglyphidodon ternatensis. Unknown age. Female (lays eggs). ~4" long.
Note that the colors are pretty washed out under our metal halides, but they become much more intense when kept under LEDs in my personal aquarium.
- Montipora capricornis, red/orange. 2"-6" in diameter.
- Montipora sp., encrusting, "Reverse Superman" coloration with pink coenosarc and polyps that are half brownish and half topped with purple/blue tips. 2"-4" in diameter.
- Montipora spongodes (I think...), green coenosarc with brown polyps. 1"-9" in diameter. This one grows very rapidly in our tanks.
- Pavona decussata, brown potato chip coral. 2"-5" in diameter. Extremely hardy, highly aggressive, and self-fragging.
- Acropora sp., fine branches, brown coenosarc, green polyps. 1.5"-5+" long. Fragile, rapidly growing, but only under metal halides. Otherwise it barely grows at all.
- Seriatopora hystrix (I think...), pink coenosarc with brown polyps. 2"-5" in diameter.
- Turbinaria frondens (I think...), pink/orange coenosarc and polyps. 8" in diameter. Some dead spots. Not a good grower in our aquarium.
- Lobophytum sp., Devil's Hand leather coral. Pink/grey. Closed in the picture, but 3"-5" in diameter when open. Easy and fast-growing.
- Sarcophyton sp., Toadstool leather coral. Pink/grey. Mostly closed in picture, but 1"-3" in diameter when open. Easy and fast-growing.
- Discosoma sp., bright blue, possibly D. cerula. 0.5"-2" in diameter. Not too many of these, as they don't like the metal halides.
- A variety of zoas/palys, the names of which I don't know.
DM me if you're interested. Note that I will be out of town June 22-July 2, so you probably can't pick anything up then. Everything will be first come, first served, and I will delete things from this post as they go. Also note that it may take some lead time to catch the fish, especially if most of the coral is still in the tank, so I'll need a few days notice if you want the fish.
Thanks,
Gabe
Last edited: