HADDONI CARPET ANEMONE CARE OVERVIEW

  • LIGHT: MODERATE-HIGH (200-300 par) is what we find best. Finding the exact amount to keep them happy will require some experimentation. Overall these anemones seem adaptable to a variety of lighting conditions. You can learn more about Lighting and it's overall impact on your reef tank in our article Lighting and your Reef Tank

  • FOOD: We haven't noticed that any specific feeding strategy is required for these anemones but they are aggressive eaters and will benefit greatly from spot feeding meaty foods like mysis or brine. Like most anemones they capture nutrients from the water and will do best when supplied a healthy amount of food. Our method is high import, high export. You can learn more about Feeding and Filtration in our article Feeding, Filtration and your Reef Tank.

  • FLOW: LOW-MODERATE. When acclimating them we recommend killing the flow makers for a bit so they can bury their foot and attach safely without getting tossed around. Too much flow, especially direct flow, can cause damage to the coral's tissue or an inability to capture food. You can read more about Flow and its overall impact on your reef tank in our article Flow and your Reef Tank

  • DIFFICULTY: EXPERT. Haddoni carpet anemones can be dangerous to other inhabitants of your aquarium. They are huge, and can go for 'walks' and there for require a large display tank. The display that keeps a Haddoni Carpet anemone should be designed with it in mind as the show piece. These anemones require a thick sand bed of 3-5" for best results. Special care should be taken with flow makers and wave pumps. They are susceptible to infections during transit, and can move about the aquarium when they decide a change of scenery is in order. This means all flow makers should be guarded or the aquarium should be designed with these animals in mind.  Anemones do not consume Alkalinity and Calcium and do not lay a calcium carbonate skeleton and so these parameters will not require extreme maintenance to keep anemones successfully. Like with all corals, specimens have been seen to do well in captivity when the right combination of Food/Light/Flow and Filtration are achieved. 

  • PRICE: HIGH. Haddoni Carpet Anemones are often caught wild and are very large in size ranging from 8-18" in diameter or even larger. They are beautiful, unique specimens and they demand a high price. 

  • COLLECTION ZONE: Indo-Pacific

  • SCIENTIFIC NAME: Stichodactyla haddoni

  • AGGRESSION: AGGRESSIVE. Haddoni carpet anemones can grow quite large and are capable of releasing nematocyst stinging cells a specialized cell in the tentacles of a jellyfish or other. These stinging cells are capable of wiping out your entire aquarium if the haddoni carpet is large enough and they can grow quite large. This is typically to happen if the haddoni carpet gets caught up in a flow maker or wave maker and this would trigger a massive release that could result in the loss of your entire tank. 

  • NATURAL TEMPERATURE: 82 °F / 28 °C  although most corals can adapt and survive in temps as low as 77 degrees and as high as 84 degrees. You can read more about temperature and how it affects your reef tank in our article Temperature and your Reef Tank.

  • PH: Recommend 8.0-8.4, we tend to run around 8.2-8.3 over 24 hours. You can read more about pH in our article pH and your Reef Tank

  • NITRATE: 5-10, try to keep stable. You can read more about nitrate and our approach to maintaining it in our article Nutrients and your Reef Tank

  • PHOSPHATE: 0.05-0.1, try to keep stable. You can read more about Phosphate and our approach to maintaining it in our article Nutrients and your Reef Tank

  • ALKALINITY: While these are soft corals and are not consumers of calcium/alkalinity as they do not lay a calcium carbonate skeleton, we still recommend 8-9 dKh. You can read more about how we maintain our alkalinity in our article Alkalinity, Calcium and your Reef Tank

  • CALCIUM: While these are soft corals and are not consumers of calcium/alkalinity as they do not lay a calcium carbonate skeleton, we still recommend 400-450 Calcium. You can read more about how we maintain our calcium in our article Alkalinity, Calcium and your Reef Tank

More About Haddoni Carpet Anemones

AnemoneCarpetCoral care guideHaddoni

Leave a comment

Your title

Write or copy/paste HTML code