Green Star Polyps

Green Star Polyps

Regular price $74.99
Unit price per

Description

  • Scientific Name: Pachyclavularia violacea (sometimes Briareum spp. too)

  • Common Name: Green Star Polyp, GSP, Starburst Polyps

  • Family: Tubiporidae

  • Origin: Indo-Pacific — commonly found in shallow reef areas

  • Appearance:

    • Bright neon green or fluorescent green polyps with feathery tentacles and a purple or pinkish mat (called the coenenchyme)

    • Polyps extend during the day and retract at night or when disturbed

    • Grows in a sheet-like mat, encrusting and spreading over surfaces

  • Growth Form: Encrusting, can carpet rocks, back walls, frag plugs, and sand


Care Requirements

Lighting

  • Moderate to High PAR (100–250)

  • Very tolerant—will grow under lower light, but colors pop under blues/actinics

  • Can become invasive in high light areas with strong growth

Water Flow

  • Moderate to High flow

  • Needs flow to keep polyps clean and help with waste removal

  • In low flow, it may attract detritus and retract more often


Placement

  • Best on isolated rocks or islands to control spread

  • Can grow up walls, frag racks, or even across the sand

  • Avoid placing it too close to slow-growing corals—it can overtake and smother them


Maintenance & Behavior

  • Extremely hardy—a great starter coral

  • Can survive in a wide range of parameters, but thrives with stability

  • Known to "close up" for days after fragging, moving, or dips—this is normal

  • Fragging is super easy: cut or peel a section of the mat and glue it to a new surface


Invasiveness Warning

  • GSP can become a nuisance if not controlled

  • Keep it separate from your main rockwork if you don’t want it spreading everywhere

  • Periodic pruning may be needed to keep it from overtaking other corals


Cool Facts

  • Looks like underwater grass waving in the current—super aesthetic

  • Some hobbyists use GSP to create living back walls or “coral lawns”

  • Polyps retract instantly if touched or disturbed—fun to watch


Pro Tips

  • Want a GSP “island”? Mount it on a single rock surrounded by sand so it can’t spread easily

  • If it's not opening, check for:

    • Low flow

    • Pest irritation (nudis, crabs)

    • Major parameter swings

  • Clean detritus off the mat occasionally to avoid algae buildup

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