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Porites lutea Mountain Coral, Large Mountain Coral

Porites luteais commonly referred to as Mountain Coral, Large Mountain Coral. Difficulty in the aquarium: Not for beginners. A aquarium size of at least 1500 Liter is recommended. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.


Profilbild Urheber Dr. John Edward Norwood "Charlie" Veron, Australien, Australien

Porites lutea. Location blank. A large helmet-shaped colony. Photograph: Charlie Veron.


Courtesy of the author Dr. John Edward Norwood "Charlie" Veron, Australien, Australien . Please visit www.coralsoftheworld.org for more information.

Uploaded by AndiV.

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lexID:
2104 
AphiaID:
207246 
Scientific:
Porites lutea 
German:
Kleinpolypige Steinkoralle 
English:
Mountain Coral, Large Mountain Coral 
Category:
Stony Corals SPS 
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Cnidaria (Phylum) > Anthozoa (Class) > Scleractinia (Order) > Poritidae (Family) > Porites (Genus) > lutea (Species) 
Initial determination:
Milne Edwards & Haime, 1851 
Occurrence:
Vereinigte Arabische Emirate, Hong Kong, Australia, China, Great Barrier Reef, Guam, Gulf of Oman / Oman, India, Indian Ocean, Indonesia, Iran, Micronesia, New Caledonia, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Pitcairn Islands, Pulisan, Sulawesi, Western Australia 
Marine Zone:
Subtidal, sublittoral, infralittoral, deep zone of the oceans from the lower limit of the intertidal zone (intertidal) to the shelf edge at about 200 m water depth. neritic. 
Sea depth:
0 - 59 Meter 
Size:
up to 78.74" (200 cm) 
Temperature:
76.28 °F - 84.02 °F (24.6°C - 28.9°C) 
Food:
Plankton, Zooxanthellae / Light 
Tank:
329.97 gal (~ 1500L)  
Difficulty:
Not for beginners 
Offspring:
Possible to breed 
Toxicity:
Toxic hazard unknown 
CITES:
Appendix II ((commercial trade possible after a safety assessment by the exporting country)) 
Red List:
Least concern (LC)  
Related species at
Catalog of Life:
 
More related species
in this lexicon:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2023-10-14 09:02:52 

Captive breeding / propagation

The offspring of Porites lutea are possible. Unfortunately, the number of offspring is not large enough to cover the demand of the trade. If you are interested in Porites lutea, please ask your dealer for offspring. If you already own Porites lutea, try breeding yourself. This will help to improve the availability of offspring in the trade and to conserve natural stocks.

Info

Porites lutea Milne Edwards and Haime, 1851

Characters: Colonies are hemispherical or helmet-shaped and may be over 4 metres across. They usually form ‘micro-atolls’ in intertidal habitats. The surface is usually smooth.

Similar Species: Porites australiensis, which has thicker walls and five tall and three short pali. Underwater, the corallites of P. lutea are filled with skeletal elements, whereas the corallites of P. lobata appear to have fewer elements and thus look more open. Porites somaliensis has similar corallite characters.

Corals of the genus Porites:

General:
Taxonomists now consider 18 families of stony corals with a total of over 100 genera.
Porites annae, Porites aranetai, Porites arnaudi, Porites astreoides, Porites attenuata, Porites australiensis, Porites branneri, Porites brighami, Porites cocosensis,Porites colonensis, Porites columnaris, Porites compressa, Porites cumulatus, Porites cylindrica, Porites deformis, Porites densa, Porites desilveri, Porites divaricata, Porites echinulata, Porites eridani, Porites evermanni, Porites flavus, Porites furcata, Porites harrisoni,Porites heronensis, Porites horizontalata, Porites latistella, Porites lichen, Porites lobata,Porites lutea, Porites mayeri, Porites monticulosa, Porites murrayensis, Porites myrmidonensis Porites napopora,Porites negrosensis, Porites nigrescens, Porites nodifera, Porites okinawensis, Porites ornata, Porites panamensis, Porites porites, Porites profundus, Porites pukoensis, Porites rugosa, Porites rus, Porites silimaniana, Porites solida, Porites somaliensis, Porites stephensoni, Porites tuberculosus, Porites vaughani.

The two genera Montipora (more than 70 species - Veron 2000) and Acropora (more than 180 species - Veron 2000) are among the most species-rich and numerous.
But besides Montipora and Acropora also Pocillopora, Stylophora, Porites and Psammocora are interesting for aquaristics.

The genus Porites includes the following currently over 50 species.
An identification of the different Porites corals is not easy in every case, if one looks at the pictures on Corals of the World.
A correct identification is done by an examination of the calcareous skeleton and by DNA - examinations.

The care of small polyped stony corals was and is due to the requirements of the corals to water quality and lighting usually far more complex, than that of most LPS corals and zooxanthellate soft corals.

Therefore, only with the possibilities to create a better water quality via skimming and live rock, as well as with better lighting and better calcium supply, the permanent keeping and reproduction came up.
Since keeping SPS corals became an achievable goal for many, zooxanthellate soft corals are hardly in the main focus of most aquarists.

In general it can be stated that Porites corals do not have such high demands on the water quality as e.g. corals of the genus Acropora, but they need a similar amount of light.

As already mentioned for Acropora and Montipora, Porites corals do not only feed on light.
They eat plankton and cover a part of their nutrition with it.
This should not be a problem anymore with suitable feed.
Of course it is advisable to feed at night, after switching off the light, because then the corals will stretch out their polyps to catch.

Important parameters include:

Light:
All small polyp stony corals require very high light levels. Therefore, they should tend to be located at the top of the tank with average lighting.

Heat/Cold:
Corals of the genus Porites will not tolerate water temperatures below 20 degrees or above 30 degrees for long periods of time. Both cases they will acknowledge with bleaching.

Current:
They can tolerate a fair amount of current, though never have the pump outlet pointed directly at a coral. Alternating, more turbulent flow conditions are best.

Water parameters:
Trace elements, (calcium 420-440 mg/L, magnesium 1100-1300 mg/L, KH below 8, strontium 8 mg/L). Water changes: at least 5% a week or 10% a month.

Water quality:
If possible, permanently stable and clear water; if necessary, carbon filtration or ozonization is advisable to remove yellow substances.

The bucket comparison (white containers of the same size, in one freshly prepared water, in the other aquarium water) will quickly show you if your water in the aquarium is as clear as fresh water.
Stony corals do not like to stand in a yellow broth.

Nitrate NO3:
Less than 5 mg/L.

Phosphate PO4:
Less than 0.1 mg/L better even in the range of 0.01 mg/L.

All the mentioned stony corals can be propagated by fragmentation. Let's not forget the aspect of animal - and environmental protection that all coral breeders do by now.
The more offshoots, the less removals in nature. Whereby also there in the years much has done.
Today, corals from aquaculture are preferably offered and sold as offspring.

Synonymised names:
Madrepora arenosa Esper, 1797 (synonym)
Porites (Porites) lutea Milne Edwards, 1860 (synonym)
Porites arenosa (Esper, 1797) (synonym)
Porites arenosa var. lutea Gardiner, 1898 (synonym)
Porites arenosa var. lutea Quoy & Gaimard, 1833 (upgrade to species level)
Porites arenosa var. parvistella Gardiner, 1898 (Synonymy)
Porites conglomerata var. lutea Quoy & Gaimard, 1833 (synonym)
Porites haddoni Vaughan, 1918 (synonym)
Porites lutea haddoni Vaughan, 1918 (synonym)
Porites tenuis Verrill, 1866 (synonym ?)

Scientific paper

  1. Temperature tolerance of the coral Porites lutea exposed to simulated large amplitude internal waves (LAIW), Buerger, P.; Schmidt, G.M.; Wall, M.; Held, C.; Richter, C. , 2015
  2. Autotrophic and heterotrophic responses of the coral Porites lutea to large amplitude internal waves, Pacherres, C. O.; Schmidt, G. M.; Richter, C. , 2013
  3. Photophysiological Consequences of Vertical Stratification of Symbiodinium in Tissue of the Coral Porites lutea, PETER J. EDMUNDS, HOLLIE M. PUTNAM and RUTH D. GATES, 2012
  4. The build up of the isotopic signal in skeletons of the stony coral Porites lutea, Ido Mizrachi; Yossi Loya; Michael Rosenfeld; Esti Kramarski-Winter; Ruth Yam; Aldo Shemesh, 2010
  5. Finding the winners in competition for substratum between coral polyps and epilithic algae on damaged colonies of the coral Porites lutea, Titlyanov, E.A.; Titlyanova, T.V.; Arvedlund, M. , 2009
  6. Dynamics and patterns of algal colonization on mechanically damaged and dead colonies of the coral Porites lutea, Titlyanov, Eduard A.; Titlyanova, Tamara V.; Chapman, David J. , 2008
  7. Interaction between benthic algae (Lyngbya bouillonii, Dictyota dichotoma) and scleractinian coral Porites lutea in direct contact, E.A. Titlyanov; I.M. Yakovleva; T.V. Titlyanova, 2007
  8. Photobiology of endolithic microorganisms in living coral skeletons: 1. Pigmentation, spectral reflectance and variable chlorophyll fluorescence analysis of endoliths in the massive coralsCyphastrea serailia, Porites luteaandGoniastrea australensis, P. J. Ralph; A. W. D. Larkum; M. Kühl, 2007
  9. Pink-line syndrome, a physiological crisis in the scleractinian coralPorites lutea, J. Ravindran; Chandralata Raghukumar, 2006
  10. Mid–late Holocene monsoon climate retrieved from seasonal Sr/Ca and δ18O records of Porites lutea corals at Leizhou Peninsula, northern coast of South China Sea, Ke-Fu Yu; Jian-Xin Zhao; Gang-Jian Wei; Xin-Rong Cheng; Pin-Xian Wang, 2005
  11. δ18O, Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca records of Porites lutea corals from Leizhou Peninsula, northern South China Sea, and their applicability as paleoclimatic indicators, Ke-Fu Yu; Jian-Xin Zhao; Gang-Jian Wei; Xin-Rong Cheng; Te-Gu Chen; Thomas Felis; Pin-Xian Wang; Tung-Sheng Liu, 2005
  12. Fidelity of δ 18 O as a proxy for sea surface temperature: Influence of variable coral growth rates on the coral Porites lutea from Hainan Island, China, Shimamura, Michiyo; Oba, Tadamichi; Xu, Guoqiang; Lu, Bingquan; Wang, Luejiang; Murayama, Masafumi; Toyoda, Kazuhiro; Winter, Amos , 2005
  13. Pink line syndrome (PLS) in the scleractinian coralPorites lutea, J. Ravindran; C. Raghukumar, 2002
  14. Effects of the multiple stressors copper and reduced salinity on the metabolism of the hermatypic coral Porites lutea, S. Alutoin; J. Boberg; M. Nyström; M. Tedengren, 2001
  15. Tomodensimétrie et mesures du rapport isotopique 18Q/16Q sur Porites lutea à Mururoa (Polynésie française) : une nouvelle approche pour appréhender l'influence du rayonnement sur la croissance corallienne annuelle, Frédéric Bessat; Muriel Boiseau; Anne Juillet-Leclerc; Danièle Buigues; Bernard Salvat, 1997
  16. Patterns and possible environmental controls of skeletogenesis ofPorites lutea, South Thailand, T. P. Scoffin; A. W. Tudhope; B. E. Brown; H. Chansang; R. F. Cheeney, 1992
  17. Metal tolerance in the scleractinian coral Porites lutea, A.D. Harland; B.E. Brown, 1989
  18. Asynchronous deposition of dense skeletal bands inPorites lutea, B. Brown; M. Tissier; L. S. Howard; M. Charuchinda; J. A. Jackson, 1986
  19. Passive colonization and asexual colony multiplication in the massive coral Porites lutea Milne Edwards & Haime, Raymond C. Highsmith, 1980

External links

  1. Corals of the World by Charlie Veron (en). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.
  2. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (multi). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.
  3. World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) (en). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.

Pictures

Commonly

Porites lutea. Location blank. A large helmet-shaped colony. Photograph: Charlie Veron.
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Husbandry know-how of owners

am 14.05.08#1
Habe mir vor einer Woche einen blauen Schwamm gekauft, der auf dieser Koralle sitzt. Mir wurde gesagt, die Koralle sei tot, aber vorhin hab ich bemerkt, dass etliche Polypen rausschauen. Hat bei mir eine schöne Lila färbung, wrde sie aber kaum auf Dauer halten können, da sie eigentlich in einem Weichkorallenbecken sitzt ohne HQI.
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