Wall Hammer - 2 Color (Purple and Green)
Description:
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Scientific Name: Euphyllia ancora
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Common Names: Anchor Coral, Hammer Coral (often used interchangeably), Wall Hammer
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Type: LPS (Large Polyp Stony) coral
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Appearance:
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Fleshy, meaty polyps with distinct anchor-, hammer-, or “U”-shaped tips on long tentacles.
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Typically found in shades of green, teal, gold, pink, and neon, sometimes with contrasting tips.
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Grows as a wall coral (long skeleton with polyps fused together), unlike branching Euphyllia like E. paraancora or E. glabrescens (torch).
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Moves and sways gently in the water—adds motion and life to the tank.
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Care Level: Moderate
Euphyllia ancora is not too difficult to keep, but wall hammers (as opposed to branching hammers) are more fragile and prone to recession if stressed.
Do:
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Place it in a low aggression zone – Needs space around it due to its long sweeper tentacles.
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Provide moderate flow – Enough to gently move the tentacles without blasting them.
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Feed occasionally – While photosynthetic, it benefits from 1–2x/week target feeding (mysis, reef roids, marine snow).
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Ensure good water quality and stability – Especially important for wall varieties.
Avoid:
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Touching or damaging the flesh – Easily torn, leading to infection or brown jelly disease.
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Too much light or flow – Causes retraction, stress, or bleaching.
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Crowding – Tentacles can sting nearby corals; give it a few inches of space minimum.
Fragging Notes:
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Wall hammers are difficult to frag due to their fused skeleton. It requires a diamond saw and careful planning.
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Branching hammer corals (e.g., E. paraancora) are easier to frag with bone cutters between heads.
Potential Issues:
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Brown Jelly Disease – A bacterial infection that spreads rapidly. Remove infected tissue and frag the healthy part if needed.
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Recession – Common in wall hammers from stress or improper placement.
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Pests – Flatworms, vermetid snails, and nipping fish (like some angels or butterflies) can irritate them.
Bonus Tips:
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Euphyllia ancora often does best in tanks with mature, stable parameters.
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Looks incredible under blue actinic lighting, especially with neon varieties.
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Running carbon and regular water changes help reduce allelopathic compounds when keeping multiple LPS or soft corals.