Lighting
Light is not the main energy source; place for feeding access and flow, not display brightness.
Dendrophyllia spp.
Dendrophyllia Coral care and ID profile for large non-photosynthetic polyps, branching cup skeleton, missed feeding windows, and practical placement decisions for mixed reef compatibility.
Compare large non-photosynthetic polyps, care range, and nearby lookalikes while checking an ID.
Snapshot
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.
Images
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: Fernando Losada Rodríguez
Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0
Photo: Liné1
Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 3.0
Photo: porshunta
Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 3.0
Ranges
These ranges are approximate starting points from the coral database and should be adjusted to the stability and history of your system.
Care
Light is not the main energy source; place for feeding access and flow, not display brightness.
moderate flow should deliver food and remove waste; dead spots are usually a bigger issue than low light.
For Dendrophyllia Coral, pair feeding with nutrient export; tissue decline can reflect starvation, water-quality stress, or both.
Dendrophyllia Coral requirements vary by specimen, aquaculture history, shipping stress, and tank maturity; use these ranges as starting points, not guarantees.
Feeding
ID
Dendrophyllia Coral is best separated from Sun Coral and Black Sun Coral by weighing large non-photosynthetic polyps, branching cup skeleton, and strong feeding tentacles. Look at polyp structure, feeding response, branch tissue, and dependence on shade and food access; then compare that structure with where the coral expands, retracts, or shows early recession. Do not rely only on color under blue lighting. For NPS corals, bright color is a weak ID shortcut; feeding response, polyp structure, and food access matter more.
Placement
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
Use these as troubleshooting checks, not a diagnosis. Symptoms may point to more than one issue.
Checklist
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Neighbors
These corals are usually compatible with spacing, observation, and stable conditions. This is not a guarantee.

Usually compatible with spacing
Duncan Coral
Duncanopsammia axifuga
Usually compatible with spacing
Candy Cane Coral
Caulastrea furcata
Usually compatible with spacing
Blastomussa
Blastomussa wellsi / Blastomussa merleti
FAQs
Dendrophyllia Coral is not a beginner coral. It needs mature-system stability and careful observation, and the listed values should be reviewed before publication.
Start Dendrophyllia Coral low in the tank or on the sand/low rockwork when its tissue form allows it. Use 0-80 PAR and moderate flow as a starting point, then adjust from tissue extension, color, and nearby coral response.
Dendrophyllia Coral is listed as an NPS coral, so feeding access matters more than display brightness. Use mysis, fine planktonic foods, and small meaty foods and the database frequency as a starting point: frequent small feedings, often daily or more, only if nutrient export can keep up. Watch polyp response and nutrient export together.
Give Dendrophyllia Coral about 3 inches of clearance as a starting point. Its database aggression level is Moderate. Use caution near Favia, Favites, and Chalice Coral. Avoid close placement with Torch Coral and Elegance Coral. Compatibility is not a guarantee, so check contact points as colonies expand. For NPS corals, keep enough access for feeding and waste removal, not just enough visual space.
Use this as a troubleshooting check. For Dendrophyllia Coral, large NPS heads stay closed during feeding and tissue thins between cups and Dendrophyllia Coral shows less normal extension, inflation, or feeding response than its recent baseline can indicate Dendrophyllia Coral missed feeding windows. Likely causes to check include irregular feeding schedule, food particles too large, or poor access to flow-carried food and recent placement, lighting, flow, or chemistry changes affecting Dendrophyllia Coral. Start with these database checks: confirm Dendrophyllia Coral polyps can catch appropriately sized food and increase feeding consistency only with nutrient export in place.
For Dendrophyllia Coral, pair feeding with nutrient export; tissue decline can reflect starvation, water-quality stress, or both. The database lists 6 months as the minimum tank age and 30 gallons as the minimum tank size. For NPS-style care, feeding consistency and nutrient export need to be planned together.
Coral Identifier
Use the app to compare photos, lookalikes, and key visual clues when you want a second pass on an ID.
Compare large non-photosynthetic polyps, care range, and nearby lookalikes while checking an ID.