Tubipora musica

Tubipora musica

Taxonomical systematics

Scientific name

Tubipora musica Linnaeus, 1758

Common names

Organ Pipe Coral, Pipe Coral, Organ Coral

Genus

Tubipora Linnaeus, 1758

Family

Tubiporidae

Suborder

Stolonifera

Order

Alcyonacea

Subclass

Octocorallia

Class

Anthozoa

Phylum

Cnidaria

Local ecology

Distribution

Tropical Western Pacific, Great Barrier Reef, Northern and Western Indian Ocean, Red Sea.

Habitat

Wide range of habitats. Most abundant on mid-shelf reefs on Great Barrier Reef, with abundance increasing with depth to 20 m (Fabricius and Alderslade, 2001).

Biological characteristics

Description

Colonies are massive and hemispherical to thick and encrusting. They consist of numerous red, hard, vertical tubes which look like organ pipes. A single polyp forms and occupies each tube. There is a system of canals inside horizontal plates that connect the polyps (Fabricius and Alderslade, 2001).

 

Polyps are monomorphic and retractile and they have long bodies. They have a broad oral disc surrounded by eight tentacles with pinnules. The polyps are usually grey (Fabricius and Alderslade, 2001)

Zooxanthellate

Hermatypic

Associated organisms

Sponges often fill the gaps between the tubes (Fabricius and Alderslade, 2001).

 

Organ Pipe Coral Tubipora musica in aquarium.

 

 

Close up of Organ Pipe Coral Tubipora musica showing some expanded polyps and the calcareous skeleton.

 

Captive care

Lighting

Light tolerant, but prefers bright light (Borneman, 2001).

Water flow

Brisk but not laminar (Borneman, 2001).

Feeding

Sorokin (1991) found that 130% of their metabolic need for carbon could be met by products of photosynthesis, 40% by predation (zooplankton), 38% from bacterioplankton and 13% from dissolved organic matter. Artemia nauplii should be readily accepted and the coral should do well in a nutrient rich aquarium.

Diseases and other maladies

"Brown-jelly-type" infections (Borneman, 2001).

References

Borneman E.H. 2001. Aquarium Corals: Selection, Husbandry, and Natural History. Microcosm Ltd, Charlotte, VT. 464pp.

Fabricius K. and Alderslade P. 2001. Soft Corals and Sea Fans: A comprehensive guide to the tropical shallow-water genera of the Central-West Pacific, the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea. AIMS, Townsville, Australia. 264pp.

Sorokin Y.I. 1991. Biomass, metabolic rates and feeding of some common zoantharians and octocorals.. Aust. J. Mar. Freshwater Res. 42:729-741.