Please note that the product information displayed is provided by manufacturers, suppliers and other third parties and is not independently verified by Petco.
Cultured Green with Pink Tips Branch Hammers are an easy coral that has great movement and vibrant green polyps with bright pink tips. Their long, flowing polyps make them very desirable to all hobbyists. These polyps resemble a hammer, which is how they got their common name. The polyps will be present during the day and will hide during the night, so do not be alarmed that they are not out when the lights are off. It has an undemanding set of requirements: needs include moderate light and medium flow. They can live in situations with higher lighting, but be sure to avoid too much flow. Feeding them a marine based, meaty diet a couple times a week is essential in any tank situation, and is most important in situations with lower lighting. Supplemental feeding and regular water changes will turn these into major colonies in a short period of time. Provide enough space between this coral and its neighbors because their sweeper tentacles come out at night and can sting other corals.
SKU | 3776525 |
---|---|
Primary Brand | Petco Marine Inverts |
Days to Ship | Ships Next Business Day |
Environment | Marine |
---|
Personalized Item flag | No |
---|---|
Size | Medium |
Petco takes great care to ensure that the Live Fish, Invertebrates & Plants you order arrives safely and in healthy condition. All Aquatic Life are guaranteed to stay alive for 7 days from the day they arrive at your home or we will gladly refund your money. Returns or refunds cannot be offered on Live Fish, Invertebrates & Plants that you decide you do not want. Please ensure the items you order are what you want before finalizing the order. If you experience a loss of your marine fish, freshwater fish, invertebrates, or live plants within 7 days of delivery please contact Customer Relations at 877-738-6742.
ACCLIMATION: Allow the sealed bag with your new fish to float in your aquarium for at least 15 minutes (but no longer than one hour) to ensure the water in the bag matches the temperature in your aquarium. For new aquariums, adding new fish slowly helps to properly develop the nitrogen cycle, which creates a safe environment for your aquatic pets. A bacteria booster may also help develop a new aquarium for your new fish. Petco offers free water testing in store to determine if your water is safe. DIET: A well-balanced diet consists of a variety of flakes, pellets, freeze-dried, and frozen food, depending on the species. FEEDING: Feed sparingly and no more than fish can eat in 1-2 minutes. Overfeeding can quickly foul the water, especially in smaller, unfiltered aquariums.
Aquarium Soft Corals
Pink Tropical Fish
Reef Tank Corals
Tissue Culture Aquarium Plant
Fancy Corals For Aquarium Tank
Miscellaneous Saltwater Invertebrates & Plants
Pink Aquarium Plants
Orange Tropical Fish
Exotic Marine Fish
Coral Frags
Unique Aquarium Fish
Large Coral Reef Decoration
Best Coral For Salt Water Tanks
Marine Angelfish
Saltwater Aquarium Plants
Corals For Beginners
Corals
Pink Saltwater Fish
Aquarium Clams
Purple Aquarium Fish
Blue Ribbon Pet Saltwater Plants & Decor
Penn Plax Saltwater Plants & Decor
CaribSea Saltwater Plants & Decor
Petco Marine Inverts Aquatic Invertebrates
Petco Marine Inverts Live Aquarium Plants
Petco Marine Inverts
CaribSea Aquarium Rocks & Coral
Ecoscape Reef Aquarium Rocks & Coral
Coralife Saltwater Fish Shop
Petco Live Rock
CaribSea Saltwater Fish Shop
Tropic Marin Saltwater Fish Shop
Petco Marine Inverts Aquatic Life for Sale
Petco Live Rock Aquarium Rocks & Coral
Penn Plax Aquarium Rocks & Coral
Ecoscape Reef
Petco Freshwater Fish Aquatic Invertebrates
Tropical Marine Centre
Petco Marine Fish Saltwater Fish
Lifegard Aquatics Aquarium Rocks & Coral
How to increase colour deep red and yellow citation of red blood parrot fish and yellow parrot fish ? And how far shyness of red blood parrot fish ?
I recently bought a pearl arrowana fish what care should I take
Hello so me and my wife bought a yellow tag a couple weeks ago for our kids and started to see a what appears to be a salt cluster on his dorsal fin what could be the reasoning behind this? And what steps can we take to prevent this from happening
My 1.5 year old Panther Cham has been growing these ugly bumps/horns for about four months now. He's housed in a shelter with misted distilled water and fed crickets regularly. I've seen some online forums that suggest reptile papaloma, but he's never had contact with any other chameleons.
I have just brought a new rapheal spooted catfish what care should I take as it is with discuss arrowana and blue angel pls will u share me the link how to hold it
So I have been thinking about getting a new caged animal, but am not sure what to get. I am hoping for a fairly easy animal to care for (AROUND the same "hardness level" as care for a Crested gecko), and one that doesn't need tons of (tank or cage) space. Also, I saw a Cowfish on a YouTube channel, and I thought they where cute, so I tried to find its care online, but I couldn't find anything. Nor could I find someone selling one.
Which category male flower fish add with couple of yellow blood parrot fish(male and female both are) in a (42L×7w×18h)inch water tank ? Can u guide to me this successful breeding process ? In a currently I have only two yellow parrot fish.
Hello, can you help me identify this plant please, the people at the store didn't know the species. Also is my aquarium good
I have bought an odessa barb about a month ago. About 2 weeks ago she started to form a sandlike, white "bump". I then treated the tank for ich, but now my barb has three areas where its red under the white thing. The white bump is more like flesh, i think. Help?..
Hello- I'm hoping your knowledgeable staff might be able to answer a question for us, please. My daughter has a goldfish that she has had for 3.5 years (won at a county fair). These last few months or so he's (she?) had a bubble growth growing on the top of his head. This last week we noticed parts of it are starting to turn black. Can you tell us what this is, by chance, and if there is anything we can do for it? We were thinking a tumor of some sort maybe? :( I've attached some photos I
I bought this goldfish last week and it has had a small growth/bump on its fin since then. It has grown slightly but not dramatically. He is still active and eating well. I have been thinking that the growth is a fungus and am treating with pimafix but judging by the way it looks I am not 100% sure it really is fungal. Does this look like a fungual infection or something else?
Only a week ago I transferred my two red eared sliders to a preformed pond enclosure, cleaned the filter, added common goldfish from the pet store to the water -- Not adding the water they came in into the pond obviously. I noticed both had a dull white smudge/blotch on their plastron and tiny white hard bumps on their carapace, and I can't manage to pick them off. No dents or bad smells, clear eyes, clean water. Same diet besides one night of goldfish binging. Could they be calcium deposits?