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EDITORIAL
by TERRY SIEGEL
| Lately, brilliantly colored corals are being offered for
sale in the United States, and probably elsewhere, that owe their garish coloration to the
use of dyes. I have been told that the practice originated in Jakarta. In my opinion, this
is a thoroughly despicable practice. Not only does it offend my aesthetic sense, but the
practice usually spells the death of the coral, and may even damage healthy corals. Most of the corals that reef keepers keep in captivity are
hermatypic, whose symbiotic dinoflagellates (zooxanthellae) produce much of the nutrition
required by these corals, utilizing light to produce carbohydrates from carbon dioxide,
water, and inorganic salts. This is a process called photosynthesis. Corals immersed in
food dyes may look "pretty" to some eyes, but it is quite likely that that the
dye prevents or limits the available light from reaching the corals zooxanthellae.
In time, this will bring about the death of the coral. The deceiving issue here is time.
Bruce Carlson once told me that many of the corals that reef keepers put into their tanks
"are already dead, but dont know it." An unsuspecting aquarist may bring
home a dyed coral, which will die in four to six weeks, but within that time period may
look like its going to make it. Furthermore, Craig Bingman (personal communication)
pointed out that the dyes used may, in and of themselves, be toxic to the dyed coral.
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An example of a dyed
Caulastrea. Photo courtesy of Mary Middlebrook, MSI |

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Dyed yellow mushrooms. Photo
courtesy of Mary Middlebrook, MSI |

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Dyed Turbinaria peltata. Photo courtesy of James
Wiseman |
Although I cannot offer the reader little
more than anecdotal observations by myself and others, artificially coloring corals can be more
of a problem than the death of the dyed coral. Apart from aesthetic and moral
considerations, a potential problem with dyed corals is that their introduction into an
established reef tank may bring about the death of other, but healthy, corals. Those of us
who have kept marine fish know that a new fish, placed in a disease free established tank,
often provokes an outbreak of disease. The new, stressed fish may bring in new pathogens or
activate dormant pathogens, which may overwhelm even the healthy fish. This process is
usually quite visible, but with corals, disease pathogens are not readily visible to the
naked eye. For example, an aquarist may introduce a dyed coral into an established reef
tank, and a number of weeks later have an outbreak of RTN, and never connect the dots -
not realizing that the dyed corals stressed condition brought about the outbreak.
If it is gaudy colors that the aquarist wants in his or
her corals I suggest a "virtual" reef tank, leaving the real thing to those of
us that are satisfied with the beauty of the natural world.
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Copyright 2002 Advanced Aquarist's Online
Magazine |
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