Lighting
50-180 PAR is a flexible starting range; growth control and steady flow usually matter more than exact PAR.
Lobophytum spp.
Use this Devil's Hand Leather profile to compare thick lobed hand-like shape with Leather Coral and Finger Leather Coral, plan conservative spacing, and watch for closure, shedding, or tissue slump under moderate flow.
Compare thick lobed hand-like shape, 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: David Witherall
Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY 3.0
Photo: Philippe Bourjon
Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0
Photo: Philippe Bourjon
Source: Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0
Ranges
These ranges are approximate starting points from the coral database and should be adjusted to the stability and history of your system.
Care
50-180 PAR is a flexible starting range; growth control and steady flow usually matter more than exact PAR.
moderate flow should help shedding and detritus removal while avoiding constant collapse of the colony.
For Devil's Hand Leather, review salinity, nutrient swings, and flow before assuming decline; temporary closure, shedding, or posture changes can be normal.
Devil's Hand Leather requirements vary by specimen, aquaculture history, shipping stress, and tank maturity; use these ranges as starting points, not guarantees.
Feeding
ID
Broad lobed fingers and a heavier base separate it from many Sinularia finger leathers. When Devil's Hand Leather is confused with Leather Coral and Finger Leather Coral, the useful clues are thick lobed hand-like shape, waxy shedding surface, and short polyps. Color is secondary; structure, expansion pattern, and the first place tissue irritation appears are more reliable. For soft corals, growth habit, polyp arrangement, and shedding behavior are usually more useful than a loose trade name.
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
Compare
Neighbors
These corals are usually compatible with spacing, observation, and stable conditions. This is not a guarantee.
Usually compatible with spacing
Zoanthids
Zoanthus spp.
Usually compatible with spacing
Mushroom Coral
Discosoma spp. / Rhodactis spp.

Usually compatible with spacing
Green Star Polyps
Pachyclavularia violacea / Briareum violaceum
FAQs
Devil's Hand Leather can be beginner friendly in a stable reef, but still needs acclimation, space, and observation after moves.
Start Devil's Hand Leather 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.
Devil's Hand Leather does not usually need direct feeding. The database lists dissolved nutrients and fine suspended foods and notes: direct feeding is usually optional. For soft-coral style care, stable nutrients and enough flow to keep surfaces clean are the main checks.
Give Devil's Hand Leather about 3 inches of clearance as a starting point. Its database aggression level is Low. Use caution near Xenia and Kenya Tree 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.
Use this as a troubleshooting check. For Devil's Hand Leather, polyps stay closed, surface film appears, or branches look limp and Devil's Hand Leather shows less normal extension, inflation, or feeding response than its recent baseline can indicate Devil's Hand Leather 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 Devil's Hand Leather. Start with these database checks: check whether Devil's Hand Leather is shedding before moving it and improve indirect flow across the surface or branches.
For Devil's Hand Leather, 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
Use the app to compare photos, lookalikes, and key visual clues when you want a second pass on an ID.
Compare thick lobed hand-like shape, care range, and nearby lookalikes while checking an ID.