Skip to content
Soft CoralBeginnerCare score 3/10

Clove Polyps

Clavularia spp.

Clove Polyps care and ID profile for small feathery polyps, connected mat or stolons, closure, shedding, or tissue slump, and practical placement decisions for mixed reef compatibility.

Compare small feathery polyps, care range, and nearby lookalikes while checking an ID.

Snapshot

Quick Care Snapshot

Difficulty
Beginner
Care score
3/10
Placement
Variable
PAR range
50-180 PAR
Flow
Moderate
Aggression
Low
Growth rate
Fast
Minimum tank age
2 months
Minimum tank size
10 gallons

Care note

This entry has low confidence or is marked for expert review. Treat the ranges as conservative starting points and compare them with your own system.

  • Verify taxonomy before species-level SEO or care claims.

Images

Reference Photos

Photos are shown only when a source includes reusable license metadata. Always verify appearance against the coral in your own lighting and flow.

Primary reference: Parent Géry

Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC0

Photo: Parent Géry

Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC0

Photo: Parent Géry

Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC0

Ranges

Water Parameters

These ranges are approximate starting points from the coral database and should be adjusted to the stability and history of your system.

Temperature
76-80 F / 24.4-26.7 C
Salinity
1.023-1.026
Alkalinity
7.5-10 dKH
Calcium
380-450 ppm
Magnesium
1250-1400 ppm
Nitrate
2-25 ppm
Phosphate
0.03-0.2 ppm

Care

Care Notes

Lighting

50-180 PAR is a flexible starting range; growth control and steady flow usually matter more than exact PAR.

Flow

moderate flow should help shedding and detritus removal while avoiding constant collapse of the colony.

Stability

For Clove Polyps, review salinity, nutrient swings, and flow before assuming decline; temporary closure, shedding, or posture changes can be normal.

Variability

Clove Polyps requirements vary by specimen, aquaculture history, shipping stress, and tank maturity; use these ranges as starting points, not guarantees.

Feeding

Feeding

Benefits from feeding
No
Food types
fine suspended foods, dissolved nutrients
Frequency
direct feeding not usually needed

ID

Identification

Key features

  • small feathery polyps
  • connected mat or stolons
  • waving flower-like heads

How to tell apart

Clove polyps have feathery flower-like heads, unlike the star-shaped GSP mat or button-like zoanthids. Separate Clove Polyps from Green Star Polyps and Xenia by checking small feathery polyps, connected mat or stolons, and waving flower-like heads in normal white light. Then confirm mat or branch structure, polyp arrangement, surface shedding, and spread pattern; avoid using a trade name as the only ID evidence. For soft corals, growth habit, polyp arrangement, and shedding behavior are usually more useful than a loose trade name.

Placement

Compatibility

Compatibility depends on specimen size, flow, growth, aggression, and spacing. Use these references conservatively and watch for contact over time.

Spacing recommendation: keep about 3 inches of clearance, then adjust based on extension and neighboring coral response.

Troubleshooting

Common Problems

Use these as troubleshooting checks, not a diagnosis. Symptoms may point to more than one issue.

Clove Polyps closure, shedding, or tissue slumpOpen for symptoms, likely causes to check, and practical next steps.

Symptoms that may indicate it

  • polyps stay closed, surface film appears, or branches look limp
  • Clove Polyps shows less normal extension, inflation, or feeding response than its recent baseline
  • changes are localized rather than a confirmed single-cause condition

Likely causes to check

  • normal shedding, salinity change, low indirect flow, or chemical irritation in a mixed reef
  • recent placement, lighting, flow, or chemistry changes affecting Clove Polyps
  • possible irritation from neighbors, pests, detritus, or handling depending on the coral group

Quick checks

  • check whether Clove Polyps is shedding before moving it
  • improve indirect flow across the surface or branches
  • review recent salinity, carbon, or chemical-filtration changes in mixed reefs

Checklist

Common Mistakes

  • allow normal soft coral shedding while checking flow and salinity trends
  • placing Clove Polyps before confirming small feathery polyps and its spacing needs
  • using Clove Polyps color or trade name alone instead of comparing it with Green Star Polyps
  • changing light, flow, and chemistry together when Clove Polyps looks irritated
  • ignoring spread control when keeping Clove Polyps

Compare

Similar Corals

Neighbors

Compatible Corals

These corals are usually compatible with spacing, observation, and stable conditions. This is not a guarantee.

FAQs

FAQs

Are Clove Polyps beginner friendly?

Clove Polyps can be beginner friendly in a stable reef, but still need acclimation, space, and observation after moves.

Where should Clove Polyps be placed?

Start Clove Polyps on a movable frag plug or isolated rock so it can be adjusted without disturbing the main aquascape. Use 50-180 PAR and moderate flow as a starting point, then adjust from tissue extension, color, and nearby coral response.

Do Clove Polyps need food or just stable nutrients?

Clove Polyps do not usually need direct feeding. The database lists fine suspended foods and dissolved nutrients and notes: direct feeding not usually needed. For soft-coral style care, stable nutrients and enough flow to keep surfaces clean are the main checks.

Can Clove Polyps spread onto nearby rock?

Give Clove Polyps about 3 inches of clearance as a starting point. Its database aggression level is Low. Use caution near Xenia and Leather Coral. Avoid close placement with Acropora and Chalice Coral. Compatibility is not a guarantee, so check contact points as colonies expand. For spreading or mat-forming corals, also watch the edge of the colony so it does not grow into neighbors unnoticed.

What should I check if Clove Polyps look stressed?

Use this as a troubleshooting check. For Clove Polyps, polyps stay closed, surface film appears, or branches look limp and Clove Polyps shows less normal extension, inflation, or feeding response than its recent baseline can indicate Clove Polyps closure, shedding, or tissue slump. Likely causes to check include normal shedding, salinity change, low indirect flow, or chemical irritation in a mixed reef and recent placement, lighting, flow, or chemistry changes affecting Clove Polyps. Start with these database checks: check whether Clove Polyps is shedding before moving it and improve indirect flow across the surface or branches.

What should I check before moving Clove Polyps?

For Clove Polyps, review salinity, nutrient swings, and flow before assuming decline; temporary closure, shedding, or posture changes can be normal. The database lists 2 months as the minimum tank age and 10 gallons as the minimum tank size. With soft corals, temporary closure or posture changes can happen, so compare against the recent baseline before moving it repeatedly.

Coral Identifier

Identify Clove Polyps.
Compare likely matches.

Use the app to compare photos, lookalikes, and key visual clues when you want a second pass on an ID.

Compare small feathery polyps, care range, and nearby lookalikes while checking an ID.

Photo-based coral IDReference photosLikely matches