Back to catalog
InvertebrateMarineIntermediate

Curated catalog

Open brain coral

Trachyphyllia geoffroyi

Open brain coral: marine corallo lps in the family Merulinidae, included for reef role, behavior, or aquarium utility.

Family
Merulinidae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

24 °C - 27 °C

pH

8 - 8.4

Water type

Marine

Ecological role

Fotosintetico su sabbia

Copper

High

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

The Open Brain Coral (*Trachyphyllia geoffroyi*) is a breathtaking, highly fleshy Large Polyp Stony (LPS) coral natively endemic to the warm, shallow reef flats and sheltered lagoons of the Indo-Pacific Ocean, the Red Sea, and Australia. Their natural biotope is defined by calm, low-energy environments. Uniquely among most corals, they do not attach to hard reefs; they are free-living and exclusively inhabit soft, sandy, or muddy bottoms where their cone-shaped skeletal base anchors them in the substrate.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Merulinidae family, they are a massive LPS coral consisting of a large, solid, heavily calcified skeleton. Defining Feature: The skeleton is typically cone-shaped or fluted at the base, flaring out into a broad, meandering, figure-eight or lobed top. During the day, the skeleton is completely obscured by an enormously swollen, deeply folded, highly fleshy continuous mantle (often composed of a single, giant polyp with one to three central mouths).

Social Behavior:

They are entirely sessile, free-living invertebrates. Because they live on the sand bed, they are physically isolated from most other corals. However, they are highly aggressive predators. CRITICAL BEHAVIOR: At night, the Open Brain Coral dramatically transforms. The fleshy mantle retracts slightly, and the central mouth(s) gape open, extruding a ring of short but highly potent, stinging feeding tentacles designed to capture passing zooplankton and chemically burn any neighboring corals.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is non-existent. Their coloration is staggering and wildly diverse, making them a premium centerpiece for any reef aquarium. The deeply folded fleshy mantle typically presents in highly contrasting, hypnotic bands, stripes, or mottling. Common color combinations include metallic green with a blood-red rim, neon orange with teal stripes, or deep purple with pink highlights. Under actinic blue LED lighting, they exhibit intense, blinding fluorescence across their entire surface.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST accommodate their unique, free-living nature. A minimum 110-liter (30-gallon) marine aquarium is required. CRITICAL REQUIREMENT: They MUST be placed directly on the sand bed. NEVER wedge a *Trachyphyllia* into the rockwork; the sharp rocks will inevitably cut and tear their heavily swollen, delicate flesh, leading to lethal bacterial infections. They require low to moderate, very gentle water flow to prevent their flesh from being blown against their own sharp skeleton.

Diet & Feeding:

They are highly autotrophic, but their massive mouths indicate their true nature as voracious carnivores. CRITICAL FEEDING STRATEGY: Target feeding them 2-3 times a week at night (when their feeding tentacles are fully extended) is highly rewarding and necessary for long-term health. They will greedily consume large, meaty items like thawed Mysis shrimp, Krill, chopped silversides, and large LPS pellets. A well-fed Brain Coral will expand to massive proportions during the day.

Water Quality:

As large, calcified LPS corals, they require stable, pristine water chemistry. They demand tropical heat (24-27°C / 75-81°F) and salinity between 1.024 and 1.026. They require stable levels of Calcium (420-450 ppm), Alkalinity (8-10 dKH), and Magnesium to slowly grow their massive skeletal base. Lighting: They strictly require low to moderate lighting. If placed under intense, direct SPS-level LED lighting, they will rapidly bleach (expel their zooxanthellae) and die.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility requires strategic placement on the sand bed. They are deadly to any coral placed within reach of their nocturnal feeding tentacles. Keep them isolated on the sand, at least 4 inches (10 cm) away from any other coral. CRITICAL WARNING: Because they live on the sand, they are highly vulnerable to substrate-sifting fish (like sleeper gobies) that may relentlessly dump sand onto their fleshy mantle, causing extreme stress, tissue necrosis, and eventual suffocation.

Aquarium Breeding:

Propagating (fragging) the Open Brain Coral is extremely difficult, highly dangerous, and generally discouraged for average hobbyists. Because the coral is essentially one giant, contiguous polyp covering a solid, massive skeleton, fragging requires a diamond-bladed wet bandsaw to literally slice the coral precisely in half through the mouth. The mortality rate from resulting bacterial infections is exceedingly high. They rarely reproduce naturally in captivity.

Risks & Diseases:

The primary risk to *Trachyphyllia* is physical tissue damage; dropping them, placing them on sharp rocks, or subjecting them to high water flow will tear the flesh against the skeleton, leading to rapid, fatal bacterial infection (Brown Jelly Disease). The second major risk is bleaching from excessively intense lighting. The third risk is smothering by sand-sifting fish or being picked at by non-reef-safe Angelfish, which find their fleshy mantles irresistible.

Invertebrate profile

Type
Corallo LPS
Diet
Fotosintesi zooxantellata e micro-cibo secondo specie
Ecological role
Fotosintetico su sabbia
Minimum group
1
Adult size
20 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.