Electric Green Galaxy Coral Frag
Description:
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Scientific Name: Galaxea fascicularis
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Common Names: Galaxea Coral, Galaxy Coral, Crystal Coral, Starburst Coral
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Type: LPS (Large Polyp Stony) Coral
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Appearance:
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Dense colony of tiny polyps that extend from a hard, encrusting or branching skeleton.
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Polyps resemble little anemones or stars, with thin tentacles and often neon green, purple, brown, or pinkish hues—some with glowing tips.
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Often shimmers or sparkles under actinic lighting.
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Famous (and feared) for its super long sweeper tentacles that can stretch up to 6+ inches at night.
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Care Level: Moderate
Galaxea corals are hardy and fast-growing under the right conditions, but their aggressiveness requires mindful placement.
Do:
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Place it in a spacious area – At least 6–10 inches from other corals to account for sweeper tentacles.
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Feed 1–2x/week – Polyps readily accept mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, reef roids, and other fine foods.
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Provide stable water parameters and moderate lighting for best growth and coloration.
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Use random or indirect flow to prevent detritus buildup without stressing polyps.
Avoid:
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Crowding it near other corals – It will almost certainly sting and damage them at night.
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Sharp changes in alkalinity or salinity – Can cause recession or stress.
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Too much direct flow – Can cause the polyps to stay retracted.
Fragging:
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Easy to frag – Grows in a branching or encrusting form with a hard skeleton. Simply break or saw off a piece of the colony and glue it to a frag plug or rock.
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Use proper protective gear (gloves & goggles), as some LPS corals can release toxins.
Common Issues:
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Tissue recession – Often from unstable water conditions or damage from other corals/fish.
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Aggression – The coral is healthy, but its long sweepers can wreck tankmates overnight.
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Brown jelly disease – Possible if tissue is damaged, though less common in Galaxea.
Bonus Tips:
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Glows beautifully under blue/actinic lighting, with neon tentacle tips standing out dramatically.
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If you're growing a coral garden, place Galaxea in isolation or surrounded by plenty of sand space.
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It can grow fairly quickly and will encrust or branch, so keep an eye on its spread.