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Continue ShoppingCherry Tree Montipora Coral
Care Level: Moderate
Coral Type: SPS / Montipora
Temperament: Peaceful to Semi-Aggressive by Growth
Photosynthetic: Yes
Placement: Middle to Upper / Rockwork
Lighting: Moderate to High
Water Flow: Moderate to Strong / High, Random
Approximate Purchase Size: Varies by Frag Size
Approximate Max Size: Colony Growth Depends on Stability, Space, Lighting, and Flow
The Cherry Tree Montipora Coral, often sold as WWC Cherry Tree Montipora, is a colorful SPS coral known for its bright collector-style coloration, textured growth, and strong contrast under reef lighting. Depending on the specimen and lighting, it may show combinations of green, yellow-green, red, orange-red, pink-red, cherry-red, or mixed fluorescent tones across the base, polyps, growth edge, or surface texture.
This coral is best treated as a trade-name Montipora sp. rather than a guaranteed formal species ID. The Cherry Tree name generally refers to its bright cherry-toned contrast and colorful SPS appearance. In plain English: the name is charming, the coral is not fruit-bearing, and reef hobby naming remains a slow collapse with pretty lighting.
Cherry Tree Montipora may grow as an encrusting, plating, or outward-spreading Montipora depending on the specific strain and aquarium conditions. It can create a bright textured area of color that works well on SPS rockwork, exposed ledges, vertical faces, or isolated islands where it has room to spread.
The Cherry Tree Montipora is photosynthetic and receives much of its energy from reef lighting. It may also benefit from dissolved nutrients, amino acids, and fine particulate foods in established reef systems. Compared with Acropora, many Montipora are more forgiving, but they are still SPS corals and should be kept in stable, mature aquariums.
This coral is usually considered peaceful, but it can become semi-aggressive by growth. It may shade, overgrow, or crowd nearby corals as it expands. It does not need sweeper tentacles to cause trouble. It simply grows into the neighborhood and makes the rockwork situation everyone else’s problem, because apparently reefs are just slow-motion property disputes with better lighting.
Note: Image is a representation of what to expect. The coral you receive may vary slightly in size, growth form, green intensity, cherry-red coloration, polyp visibility, growth rim, and overall appearance.
A minimum aquarium size of 20-30 gallons or larger is recommended for Cherry Tree Montipora, though larger mature reef systems are preferred. Larger aquariums provide better water stability, stronger flow options, and more room for SPS growth.
Montipora does not require a massive aquarium, but it does require stability. Small aquariums can work, but parameter swings happen faster and give SPS corals more opportunities to express disappointment through fading, browning, poor polyp extension, or tissue loss. Efficient little disaster machines, those small tanks.
Cherry Tree Montipora is best placed on middle to upper rockwork where it receives moderate to high lighting and moderate to strong varied flow. Start lower if the coral is new, freshly shipped, or coming from lower lighting, then move it gradually once it shows good color, polyp extension, and growth.
Rock Placement: Place securely on stable rockwork where the coral has room to encrust, thicken, plate, or grow outward.
Vertical Placement: Encrusting Montipora can work well on vertical or angled rock faces where it can spread without immediately smothering nearby corals.
Sandbed Placement: Temporary sandbed placement can work during acclimation if lighting is intense, but long-term placement should usually be on rockwork with appropriate light and flow.
Growth Space: Leave open space around the frag for future growth. Cherry Tree Montipora may encrust, plate, thicken, or spread across nearby rockwork once established.
Spacing: Leave space from nearby corals to prevent contact, shading, or overgrowth. It is not usually a strong stinger, but it can still win through growth and persistence.
SPS Zones: Best placed in an SPS-friendly area with stable light, strong flow, and room for outward growth. Avoid placing it close to aggressive LPS corals such as torches, hammers, frogspawn, galaxea, favias, chalices, or acans.
Cherry Tree Montipora requires clean, stable reef conditions. Stability is more important than chasing perfect numbers. Sudden swings in alkalinity, salinity, nutrients, temperature, or lighting can cause fading, browning, bleaching, tissue recession, burnt edges, or stalled growth.
Temperature: 75-80°F
pH Level: 8.1-8.4
Salinity: 1.025-1.026 specific gravity
Alkalinity: 7.5-9.5 dKH
Calcium: 400-450 ppm
Magnesium: 1250-1350 ppm
Nitrate: 2-10 ppm
Phosphate: 0.03-0.10 ppm
Avoid major parameter swings. Montipora can adapt to different nutrient levels, but rapid changes are often the problem. Keep alkalinity especially stable. SPS corals do not appreciate chemistry surprises, which is tragic because reef keepers keep inventing them like it is a civic duty.
Cherry Tree Montipora prefers moderate to high lighting. A general target range of 150-250 PAR works well for many Cherry Tree Montipora frags, with some established colonies adapting higher once settled.
Moderate to High PAR: Start around 125-150 PAR if newly added, then gradually increase if stronger coloration and growth are desired.
Light Acclimation: New Montipora frags should be acclimated gradually to stronger lighting. Start lower or reduce intensity, then increase slowly over several days to weeks.
Color Display: Cherry Tree Montipora often shows its best green, yellow-green, cherry-red, orange-red, or pink-red contrast under strong reef lighting with stable nutrients.
Growth Rim: The growth rim may become brighter, lighter, or more colorful as the coral settles and begins active growth.
Too Much Light: Signs may include bleaching, pale tissue, fading, burnt edges, or tissue recession.
Too Little Light: Signs may include browning, dull coloration, weak growth, reduced encrusting or plating, or loss of contrast.
Do not blast a fresh Cherry Tree Montipora frag with maximum light because the name made you nostalgic for fruit snacks. That is not reef keeping. That is photon-based poor judgment wearing a PAR meter.
Cherry Tree Montipora prefers moderate to strong, random water flow. Flow should keep the surface clean, prevent detritus from collecting, and support gas exchange without blasting tissue from one direction.
Ideal Flow: Moderate to strong, varied, random flow that moves across and around the coral.
Avoid Direct Laminar Flow: Constant direct blasting from one direction can irritate tissue, damage growth edges, or create uneven growth.
Avoid Dead Spots: Too little flow can allow detritus to settle on the coral surface, around the base, or beneath plating areas, which may contribute to algae growth or tissue stress.
Surface Cleanliness: The coral surface should stay clean and free of settled waste. If detritus collects on the coral, increase indirect flow or adjust placement.
Growth Changes Flow: As Cherry Tree Montipora spreads or plates outward, it can create low-flow pockets around encrusting edges, uneven surfaces, or plate undersides. Reevaluate flow as the colony expands, because apparently corals can become their own plumbing problem.
If the coral starts losing tissue near the base or around areas where debris settles, evaluate flow and detritus buildup before blaming the coral for being “random.” It is not random. It is just a living thing responding to the underwater dust humans keep manufacturing.
Cherry Tree Montipora is photosynthetic, meaning it receives much of its energy from light through its symbiotic zooxanthellae. It may also benefit from dissolved nutrients and fine particulate foods in the water column.
Photosynthesis: Moderate to high reef lighting provides much of the coral’s energy.
Broadcast Feeding: The coral may capture fine particles from the water column during regular fish and coral feeding.
Fine Coral Foods: Amino acids, powdered coral foods, phytoplankton-style blends, rotifers, cyclops, and very fine suspended foods may be used carefully in established systems.
Dissolved Nutrients: Low but detectable nitrate and phosphate can help support color and growth. Avoid stripping the aquarium too aggressively.
Direct target feeding is usually not necessary. Broadcast feeding or general reef feeding 1-2 times per week can be beneficial if nutrients are not already high.
Avoid heavy feeding in small systems. The coral does not need a powdered-food snowstorm because someone watched one SPS video and became dangerous.
Cherry Tree Montipora works well in SPS-focused and mixed reef aquariums when placed with enough room, strong lighting, good flow, and protection from aggressive neighboring corals.
Fish: Reef-safe fish such as clownfish, gobies, blennies, wrasses, tangs, cardinalfish, firefish, anthias, and other peaceful to semi-peaceful community fish.
Avoid: Fish known to nip SPS corals, such as some angelfish, butterflyfish, filefish, puffers, and certain triggers.
Invertebrates: Generally safe with cleaner shrimp, snails, hermit crabs, urchins, and most common reef invertebrates. Large urchins or bulldozing snails may move unsecured frags.
Coral: Keep away from aggressive neighboring corals, especially torches, hammers, frogspawn, galaxea, favias, chalices, acans, mushrooms, and other stinging LPS.
SPS Neighbors: Can be placed near other SPS corals with room for future growth. Watch for shading, edge contact, plating contact, or competitive overgrowth as colonies mature.
Encrusting Competition: Cherry Tree Montipora can grow into nearby encrusting corals such as cyphastrea, psammocora, leptoseris, favites, or other Montipora varieties if placed too close.
Shading Risk: If the coral develops plating growth, it may shade corals beneath or beside it. Plan surrounding space before it becomes a cherry-colored coral patio roof.
Temperament: Peaceful to semi-aggressive by growth. It does not have long sweepers, but it can shade, overgrow, or crowd nearby corals.
Growth Pattern: May encrust, plate, thicken, scroll, or develop outward growth depending on the specific strain and aquarium conditions.
Coloration: May show green, yellow-green, cherry-red, orange-red, pink-red, red, or mixed fluorescent tones depending on lighting, nutrients, stability, and photography conditions.
Polyp Color: Polyps may appear red, orange-red, pink-red, yellow-green, green, or mixed depending on lighting and coral condition.
Growth Rim: A healthy growing edge may appear brighter, lighter, or more colorful than older central areas.
Polyp Extension: Healthy Montipora may show small polyp extension, often more noticeable during calmer periods or after lights begin to dim.
Growth Rate: Cherry Tree Montipora can become a strong grower once established in stable conditions. Give it room unless the plan is to let it claim the rockwork like a tiny cherry-colored empire.
SPS Sensitivity: More forgiving than many Acropora, but still sensitive to rapid changes in alkalinity, salinity, nutrients, temperature, lighting, and flow.
Algae Risk: Tissue loss or exposed skeleton can quickly become algae-covered if flow, nutrients, or stability are poor.
Frag Handling: Handle by the plug, dead skeleton, or base whenever possible. Avoid touching living tissue or fragile growing edges.
Dipping: Coral dipping before introduction is strongly recommended. Use coral-safe dips according to product directions and inspect the frag plug and base closely.
Pest Awareness: Inspect carefully for Montipora-eating nudibranchs, eggs, flatworms, algae, vermetid snails, and other hitchhikers before placing into the display.
Quarantine: Coral quarantine is ideal for Montipora when possible. Montipora pests are tiny, obnoxious, and very committed to ruining a perfectly good reef.
Base Encrusting: A healthy frag may encrust at the base before developing stronger outward growth.
Trade Name Reality: Cherry Tree Montipora is a hobby or trade-name coral, so exact green tone, cherry-red intensity, growth pattern, and contrast can vary between vendors, lighting systems, nutrients, and growth stages. Buy based on the actual frag photo when possible, because coral names are not binding contracts with reality.
Placement Reality: This coral can become a bright SPS showpiece, but it needs space. Cherry Tree Montipora does not simply “stay cute.” It spreads, plates, thickens, and turns the rockwork into its personal real estate project.
This acclimation method helps reduce stress by gradually introducing the coral to your aquarium’s temperature, lighting, and water chemistry.
Turn down aquarium lights or place the coral in a shaded lower area at first. This helps reduce stress while the coral adjusts.
Float the sealed bag in the aquarium for 15-20 minutes to allow the temperature in the bag to equalize with the tank.
Carefully open the bag and transfer the coral and shipping water into a clean container. Handle the coral by the plug, base, or dead skeleton rather than touching the living tissue or fragile growing edge.
Add small amounts of tank water to the container every few minutes for 20-30 minutes. Avoid exposing the coral tissue to air longer than necessary.
Use a coral-safe dip according to the product instructions. Inspect carefully for Montipora pests, eggs, algae, and hitchhikers before the coral enters your aquarium.
Place the coral in a lower or slightly shaded SPS-safe area at first, with moderate to strong indirect flow. Discard the shipping and dip water. Do not pour shipping water or dip water into your aquarium.
Allow the coral to adjust gradually over several days to weeks before moving it into brighter light. Watch for coloration, tissue health, polyp extension, cherry-red contrast, base encrusting, and outward growth before making major placement changes.
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