jennJennM":3axf3r3k said:Fast growth and unusual (or abnormal) colour are two different issues.
With all the talk in this and other threads about "cherries", it implied that you were after rare or unsual stuff. That's usually about colour. If you are growing out colonies for fragging, the shape of the piece is largely irrelevant, although size might be a factor, I suppose.
Personally I'm not a fan of forcing any living thing to behave or grow at a rate different from what is naturalor normal under normal environmental conditions for that particular specimen. Happens all the time though, corals, farm animals... calves for veal, geese for foie gras...and etc.
We've shifted the focus again apparently, from colour to growth rate...
I give up - you win. I'm going to bed.
Jenn
treeman":12jtempg said:The problem with the GH is that we don't see them the same. I guess because of the intensity and/or the kelvin rating (color). I have some brown sps under 6000k (the sun) but when they are put in tanks they are not. Same coral, I put one in my tank with 175w MH 20k, it was tan with silver polyps. I sent one to a good friend, I don't know her set up but the coral is orange body with blue/green polyps. I think the colors are there but we just can't see them.
I agree Mike, this is precisely why I was so gung-ho about moving the SPS out of the GH side and over to the garage side where I could control the lighting better.mkirda":z7yt6poi said:I think in Harbor's case, it was at least partially due to the type of glass used. I think it cut down a lot on the blue part of the spectrum.