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Curated catalog
Branching montipora
Montipora digitata
Branching montipora: marine corallo sps in the family Acroporidae, included for reef role, behavior, or aquarium utility.
- Family
- Acroporidae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
24 °C - 27 °C
8 - 8.4
Marine
Fotosintetico calcificante
High
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
The Digitata Montipora (*Montipora digitata*) is an extremely popular, fast-growing branching Small Polyp Stony (SPS) coral natively endemic to the warm, shallow reef flats and highly illuminated lagoon zones of the Indo-Pacific Ocean, Fiji, and the Red Sea. Their natural biotope is defined by bright, shallow water where they form massive, tightly packed thickets of branching calcified skeletons, providing vital shelter for countless small reef fish and invertebrates.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Acroporidae family, they are a classic branching SPS coral. Defining Feature: Unlike *Montipora capricornis* which grows in flat plates, *Montipora digitata* grows vertically in a heavily branching, arborescent (tree-like) or finger-like (digitate) structure. The skeleton is entirely calcified, relatively smooth, and densely dotted with thousands of microscopic, fuzzy polyps that give the branches a soft, velvet-like appearance when fully extended.
Social Behavior:
They are strictly sessile and completely peaceful invertebrates. They possess zero sweeper tentacles and pose absolutely no stinging threat to neighboring corals. However, they are rapid, aggressive growers. Because they branch vertically and outward at an explosive rate (for an SPS coral), they will quickly occupy significant vertical real estate in the aquarium and can easily branch out over other corals, passively shadowing them from the light.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is non-existent. Their coloration is iconic and highly saturated, making them a vibrant focal point in an SPS reef. The solid skeletal branches and the fuzzy polyps are typically monochromatic, presenting in stunning shades of electric "Forest Fire" orange, vivid salmon pink, deep purple, or mint green. Under heavy actinic blue LED lighting, the microscopic polyps emit a highly visible, intense fluorescence.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture MUST accommodate their vertical branching structure and demand for intense lighting. A minimum 150-liter (40-gallon) marine aquarium is required. CRITICAL REQUIREMENT: They should be securely superglued or epoxied to the middle or upper tiers of the live rock structure. Ensure they have significant vertical headroom to grow. They strictly require strong, chaotic, turbulent water flow to penetrate the tight skeletal branches and prevent detritus buildup.
Diet & Feeding:
They are overwhelmingly autotrophic, relying on their internal symbiotic zooxanthellae algae to convert the intense aquarium lighting into the vast majority of their daily caloric needs. They DO NOT require direct target feeding. However, their thousands of fuzzy, microscopic polyps are highly efficient at passively capturing dissolved amino acids, coral snow, and microscopic phytoplankton from the water column, which is essential for rapid skeletal calcification.
Water Quality:
They are celebrated as one of the hardiest, most forgiving branching SPS corals available, bridging the gap for aquarists moving from LPS to SPS. They demand stable tropical heat (24-27°C / 75-81°F) and salinity between 1.025 and 1.026. CRITICAL REQUIREMENT: They unconditionally require high lighting (PAR 200-350) and impeccable stability in Calcium (420-450 ppm), Alkalinity (8-10 dKH), and Magnesium. Rapid swings in Alkalinity will cause catastrophic tissue peeling (RTN).
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is absolute regarding their peaceful nature; they will not sting anything. However, their peaceful nature makes them incredibly vulnerable. CRITICAL WARNING: If placed too close to aggressive LPS corals (*Euphyllia*, *Galaxea*), the long sweeper tentacles of the LPS will repeatedly sting the *Montipora digitata* branches, instantly burning the tissue down to the bare white skeleton. They must be placed safely away from stinging neighbors.
Aquarium Breeding:
Propagating (fragging) *Montipora digitata* is remarkably easy and highly encouraged to control their rapid growth. Aquarists simply use bone shears to cleanly snip off a 1 to 2-inch skeletal branch. The snapped-off "finger" is then dried lightly at the base and superglued directly to a ceramic frag plug. The severed fragment will quickly heal over the glue and begin branching into a new colony, while the mother colony will rapidly sprout multiple new branches from the cut site.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest threat to *Montipora digitata* is the Montipora Eating Nudibranch (MEN). These microscopic, white pests are perfectly camouflaged and will rapidly strip the flesh off the branches, leaving a stark white, dead skeleton behind. The second major risk is Rapid Tissue Necrosis (RTN) caused by sudden fluctuations in Alkalinity or temperature. The third risk is physical breakage; their rapid branching growth makes the skeleton fragile and easy to accidentally snap.
Invertebrate profile
- Type
- Corallo SPS
- Diet
- Fotosintesi zooxantellata e micro-cibo secondo specie
- Ecological role
- Fotosintetico calcificante
- Minimum group
- 1
- Adult size
- 25 cm
- GH
- n/a
- KH
- n/a
- TDS
- n/a
- Copper
- High
- Shock sensitivity
- Alta: acclimatazione lenta e parametri stabili
- Calcium and minerals
- Richiede calcio, KH e magnesio stabili per crescita calcarea quando applicabile
- Reproduction
- Riproduzione in acquario variabile; spesso richiede gestione larvale marina dedicata.
- Compatibility
- Verificare aggressivita, predazione, spazio chimico e distanza da coralli urticanti.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Licensed observation photo from iNaturalist for Montipora digitata.
Licensed observation photo from iNaturalist for Montipora digitata.