Beautiful Coral Reef Euphyllia Baliensis
Euphyllia baliensis is a new large polyp stony coral with extremely thin branches, only found in 27 meters below sea level at Bali, First found in 2011.
We all had a good look at the new Euphyllia baliensis with the huge announcement from Conversation International in Spring of 2011 but now the new coral has a name, and a whole lot more details on what makes this coral special. Hailing only from a limited range in Bali, Euphyllia baliensis has extremely thin branches, which are well spaced out like a classic branching hammer coral, Euphyllia parancora.
Whereas Euphyllia cristata previoudly had the smallest corallites of all the Euphyllia species, its 20-40mm (0.75 to 1.5 inch) corallites completely dwarf the thinner-than-a-pencil branches of Euphyllia baliensis which clock in at a miniscule 3mm – that’s an eighth of an inch!
With branches thinner than an Acropora and corallites on par with the axial tip of some larger staghorn Acros, Euphyllia baliensis is truly an extreme oddball within the genus Euphyllia but
the oddity doesn’t end there. All stony corals are Hexacorals, meaning
that they have a body plan, skeleton, corallite and polyp arrangements
that are usually in multiples of six – think Goniopora with 24 tentacles, Alveopora with 12. For some strange evolutionary reason Euphyllia baliensis
not only has super tiny branches, but its internal skeleton is an
“octameral” body plan with a symmetry of four or eight being more
common.
Some other features to note about Euphyllia baliensis is
that is has mostly hammer shaped tentacle tips, but the tentacles
frequently also have little side protuberances giving it a mitten-shaped
appearance. The color of Euphyllia baliensis is somewhat muted
being a greyish brown with a little green at the center of the polyp
but something tells us our awesome LED aquarium lighting could do
wonders for the species looks.
Euphyllia baliensis is described by Turak, DeVantier & Erdmann in Zootaxa 3422: 52–61.
Speaking of reef aquariums, so far Euphyllia baliensisis
only known from the “deeper reef slope of a small island off eastern
Bali, bordering Lombok Strait “, found at a depth of 27 to 37 meters (85
to 120 feet). A lot of Euphyllia corals are exported from Bali, many of them aquacultured and come to think of it we have seen some thin-branched strains of Euphyllia before, but none that way thinner than the thinnest Caulastrea we’ve ever seen.
Hopefully, Euphyllia baliensis doesn’t suffer from delicate
and highly breakable branches that get demolished in shipping, part of
the reason why we probably see so few Anacropora colonies in
the trade. With lots of great coralogists operating in and around Bali
we have confidence that somebody will try to find this coral, and
someday it will become readily available through mariculture or as frags
from fellow reefers.
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