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Hi. A toadstool leather I've had about 18 months and which has doubled in size during that time is in the process of sloughing off a fair-sized chunk of the cap. I mean, one of the cap "lobes" is in the process of falling off.

 

Is this a normal method of reproduction, or is something wrong? All the other corals and fish, and the toadstool itself seem happy. I did do a 30% water change yesterday after running Slime Away (antibiotic to get rid of a minor but irritating red slime algae problem), also upped the Mg from 1125-1200 this morning.

 

Thanks!

 

Mark

Without really seeing your coral I would guess it is reproducing.

 

"Typically, a hole in the cap of your Toadstool leather is the beginning of the coral's reproduction. As the hole grows larger and approaches the edge of the cap, a small piece of the coral will dangle from the mother colony and eventually drop." Quote taken from here.

Without really seeing your coral I would guess it is reproducing.

 

"Typically, a hole in the cap of your Toadstool leather is the beginning of the coral's reproduction. As the hole grows larger and approaches the edge of the cap, a small piece of the coral will dangle from the mother colony and eventually drop." Quote taken from here.

 

 

I too, ran across that quote/source but I do not believe it is accurate. Please see http://www.wamas.org/forums/index.php?show...mp;#entry218081

Can't really tell without a picture, but it sounds like its' budding. I remember seeing Almon's large toadstool in the process of dropping a few buds. Pretty cool actually.

I'm glad someone asked about this. My Sarcophyton has been doing the same thing. I've been observing the process over the last few weeks. It started with a lesion near one of its' lobes, then flesh was sloughing off. Several nickel size pieces came off in the process and the "wounds" are beginning to heal.

I used to think that "hole theory" was crap, but now that I've seen it, I'm a believer.

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