Products

170 products


  • Sale -61%Last stock! Ecotech Marine Radion XR 15 G6 Pro

    Ecotech Marine Ecotech Marine Radion XR 15 G6 Pro

    1 in stock

     EcoTech aims to bring you the absolute best of what’s technologically possible. In the aquarium, enjoy richer colors, pop more fluorescence and create the ultimate balance between crisp and actinic.  From its inception, Radion has set the standard for what full spectrum aquarium LED lighting can be. The 6th generation pushes the limits of color rendition and fluorescence without sacrificing any of the famous flexibility that caters to the desire of the user.  With the addition of 395nm diodes, G6 pushes deeper into the UV range, achieving a new level of coral and fish fluorescence. Both Blue and Pro models also feature a rebalancing of color channels and LED (Diode) mix to augment the most flexible and balanced spectra available in aquarium lighting. Better than ever! The G6 Hybrid Hemispherically Edge Illuminating (HEI2) optic system combined with LED placement and form factor delivers beautiful shimmer, super color mixing, ridiculously even PAR, mind-blowing spread and even the ability to adjust the type of blue hue that you love the most. Mind-blowing Spread Ultimate Fluorescence Intense Full Spectrum Color Fully programmable Wireless Control Moonlight Weather Simulation Technologically Superior Design Premium Quality Components Unmatched Support and Service Extensive Mounting Options Optional Diffuser Accessory Spread so wide it has to be seen to be believed. Radion G6 increases output from an impressive 110.5 degrees in the G5 to a staggering 126.3 degrees. This improvement was achievable through a change to the primary optic on the LEDs which then integrates with the geometry in the existing HEI (Hemispherically Edge Illuminating) secondary optic (lens). Hemispherical Edge Illumination Radion is a winner in the cost vs. output equation. The HEI2 optical system delivers 126.3 degrees of output. The result, incredibly even PAR over almost 4ft of coverage area making it the highest average output Radion and perhaps the most efficient aquarium light ever made. RADION G6 Pro The Radion Pro is responsible for lighting public aquariums, aquaculture facilities and coral spawning laboratories worldwide. Despite this, our most important user is the discerning home aquarist. Unbeatable in balanced output the G6 PRO carries the tradition further with extra capability in the blue and UV spectrum and mind-blowing additional spread!

    1 in stock

    €1.200,00€465,00

  • Sale -67%Last stock! Ecotech Reef Link

    Ecotech Reef Link

    1 in stock

    Използван няколко месеца

    1 in stock

    €150,00€50,00

  • Enactamea quadricolor red L

    Enactamea quadricolor red L

    6 in stock

    Bubble-tip anemones, scientifically named Entacmaea quadricolor, are sea anemones known for their distinctive, bulbous tentacle tips. These anemones display a range of colors, including greens, tans, browns, and maroons. They have a sticky foot called a "basal disc" that they use to attach to surfaces, and their bodies consist of a cylindrical stalk topped with an oral disc surrounded by tentacles.  Key features of Bubble-tip Anemones: Bulbous Tentacles: The most prominent feature is the bubble-like or pear-shaped tips on their tentacles, which give them their common name.  Color Variation: They can be found in various colors, including green, tan, brown, and maroon.  Sticky Foot: They have a basal disc (or pedal disk) that helps them anchor to surfaces.  Symbiotic Relationship: Bubble-tip anemones can host clownfish and other anemonefish, forming a beneficial symbiotic relationship.  Growth: They can grow up to a foot in diameter, but typically remain smaller in aquariums.  Location: They are found in oceans around the world, including the Indo-Pacific area and the Red Sea.  In essence, the Bubble-tip Anemone is a vibrant, adaptable creature with unique characteristics, making it a popular choice for marine aquariums

    6 in stock

    €60,00

  • Euphyllia ancora sp. LILAC FRAG

    Euphyllia ancora sp. LILAC FRAG

    Price per Polyp   Fimbriaphyllia ancora, commonly known as anchor coral or hammer coral, is a reef-building coral characterized by its dome or cushion-shaped colonies and distinctive anchor-shaped (or hammer-shaped) tips on its tentacles. It exhibits a wide range of colors, including green, purple, and orange, making it popular in the aquarium trade. This species is known for its flabello-meandroid skeleton and is found in Indo-Pacific tropical and subtropical waters.  Here's a more detailed description: Colony Shape: Fimbriaphyllia ancora forms dome or cushion-shaped colonies, which can be quite large, sometimes several meters across.  Skeleton: The skeleton is flabello-meandroid, meaning it has a branching pattern with valleys between the ridges.  Polyps: The polyps have large, tubular tentacles with distinct anchor-like tips. These tips can also resemble hammers or the letter T.  Coloration: The coral displays a variety of colors, including blue-gray, orange, and green, often with pale cream or green outer borders on the tentacles.  Habitat: It is found in Indo-Pacific tropical and subtropical waters, forming large colonies in reef environments.  Common Names: It is known as anchor coral or hammer coral due to the shape of its tentacles. 

    €13,00

  • Euphyllia ancora sp. mini olive green FRAG

    Euphyllia ancora sp. mini olive green FRAG

    Price per polyp   Euphyllia ancora, commonly known as anchor coral or hammer coral, is a reef-building coral characterized by its dome or cushion-shaped colonies and distinctive anchor-shaped (or hammer-shaped) tips on its tentacles. It exhibits a wide range of colors, including green, purple, and orange, making it popular in the aquarium trade. This species is known for its flabello-meandroid skeleton and is found in Indo-Pacific tropical and subtropical waters.  Here's a more detailed description: Colony Shape: Fimbriaphyllia ancora forms dome or cushion-shaped colonies, which can be quite large, sometimes several meters across.  Skeleton: The skeleton is flabello-meandroid, meaning it has a branching pattern with valleys between the ridges.  Polyps: The polyps have large, tubular tentacles with distinct anchor-like tips. These tips can also resemble hammers or the letter T.  Coloration: The coral displays a variety of colors, including blue-gray, orange, and green, often with pale cream or green outer borders on the tentacles.  Habitat: It is found in Indo-Pacific tropical and subtropical waters, forming large colonies in reef environments.  Common Names: It is known as anchor coral or hammer coral due to the shape of its tentacles. 

    €13,00

  • Euphyllia divisa violet green FRAG

    Euphyllia divisa violet green FRAG

    Price per one Head   Euphyllia divisa, commonly called Frogspawn Coral, is a large-polyped stony coral known for its distinctive appearance with tentacles resembling a hammer or torch. It's native to the Indo-Pacific region and is a popular choice for marine aquariums due to its vibrant colors and unique beauty. Frogspawn corals are known for being easy to keep and can thrive under moderate to high light levels.  Key Characteristics: Appearance: Large polyps with tentacles resembling a hammer or torch.  Color: Exhibits a range of colors including brown, green, pink, and yellow.  Habitat: Found in shallow, turbid environments and often attached to vertical surfaces.  Feeding: Feeds on light, solid foods like Mysis shrimp, and frozen foods like brine shrimp.  Care: Requires moderate to high light, medium water flow, and supplemental feeding.  Aggression: Can be aggressive towards neighboring corals, so adequate spacing is needed in the aquarium.  Conservation Status: Listed as "Near Threatened" by the IUCN.   

    €18,00

  • Euphyllia glabescens Gold torch FRAG

    Euphyllia glabescens Gold torch FRAG

    6 in stock

      Price per one polyp   Euphyllia glabrescens, commonly known as Torch Coral, is a large-polyp stony coral characterized by its long, tubular polyps with knob-like tips and a range of colors, often bicolored with contrasting tentacle tips. These corals are colonial, with corallites (individual coral units) spaced apart and having thin, sharp-edged walls.  Key features of Euphyllia glabrescens: Appearance: Long, tubular polyps resembling a torch, with a variety of colors including brown, green, pink, and fluorescent shades.  Colony Structure: Phaceloid (corallites arranged in a branching pattern), with corallites 20-30 mm in diameter and spaced 15-30 mm apart.  Tentacles: Large, tubular tentacles with knob-like tips.  Color: Can be found in various colors, often with contrasting colors on the tentacles and polyp tips.  Care: Suitable for intermediate-level reef keepers, requiring stable water parameters, moderate to high lighting, and moderate water flow.  Feeding: While they can photosynthesize, they benefit from supplemental feeding with small meaty foods like zooplankton or coral-specific foods.  Aggression: Can have sweeper tentacles that may harm neighboring corals, so they should be placed away from other corals.  Compatibility: Clownfish often use torch corals as their home

    6 in stock

    €60,00

  • Last stock! Euphyllia paradivisa green Frag

    Euphyllia paradivisa green Frag

    4 in stock

    Price per head   Euphyllia paradivisa, commonly called branching frogspawn coral, is a species of large-polyped stony coral native to the Indo-Pacific. It's known for its branching structure, where numerous polyps, each with large, hammer-shaped tentacles, extend from the main stem. These polyps typically display a pale greenish-grey or pink coloration, with lighter tentacle tips.  Here's a more detailed look: Appearance: Euphyllia paradivisa has a branching structure, resembling a small, delicate tree with multiple polyps. The polyps themselves are large and have tentacles with distinctive, hammer-shaped tips.  Coloration: The coral's base color is often a pale greenish-grey, but it can also exhibit pink or even bicolor variations with purple tips and green stems. The tentacle tips are generally lighter than the main body of the polyp.  Habitat: These corals are found in shallow reef environments, particularly in areas protected from strong wave action.  Care: Euphyllia paradivisa is a popular species in the marine aquarium hobby, but it requires stable water parameters and moderate water flow. They are generally considered moderate to easy to keep, especially when provided with adequate light and a stable environment.  Fluorescence: Many Euphyllia paradivisa corals on rockcorals.de exhibit fluorescence, particularly when illuminated with blue-dominated light. 

    4 in stock

    €50,00

  • Last stock! Favia sp. Space Monkey FRAG

    Favia sp. Space Monkey FRAG

    1 in stock

    Favia are a genus of reef-building stony corals, known for their massive or thickly encrusting colonies, often dome-shaped or flat. They are commonly referred to as brain corals or closed brain corals, and are part of the family Mussidae. Favia corals are characterized by having individual walls for each corallite, and they have sweeper tentacles which can extend and sting other corals.  Here's a more detailed description: Growth Form: Favia corals can grow in various shapes, including massive, dome-shaped, or encrusting.  Corallites: The corallites, which are the individual cups where the polyps live, are plocoid (placing them in a cone shape) and often have their own walls.  Septa and Costae: These structures are well-developed and covered with fine teeth, contributing to the coral's intricate structure.  Polyps: Favia polyps extend and feed at night, using their tentacles to capture prey and assess their surroundings.  Sweeper Tentacles: These tentacles are used to "sweep" the water and detect nearby corals, potentially leading to aggression and "coral wars".  Habitat: Favia corals are found in various reef environments, including shallow water and deeper slopes.  Color: They can display a wide range of colors, including pale grey, green, brown, and often have calices of contrasting colors

    1 in stock

    €65,00

  • Sale -60%Last stock! Garlic concentrate- 30 ml

    Aqualight Garlic concentrate- 30 ml

    1 in stock

    Product information "Garlic 30ml" Garlic is recommended for freshwater, seawater and planted aquariums or ponds. Good for fish and plants. It contains Allicin which is a very powerful antioxidising agent that helps to prevent damages in fish cells and other marine inhabitants by strengthening their immune system and improving their appetite. This leads to healthy and fertile fishes. The allicin of the garlic kills germs even when mixed with 100.000 parts of water ! In deed a wonderful gift of the nature.

    1 in stock

    €25,00€10,00

  • Gorgonia sp. Purple FRAG

    Gorgonia sp. Purple FRAG

    8 in stock

    Gorgonia, or sea fans, are a genus of soft corals found in marine environments, particularly in areas with strong water currents. They are characterized by their fan-like shape and often have a purple hue, though other colors like brown or yellow can also occur. Sea fans are colonial invertebrates, meaning they are made up of many individual polyps, which are small, fragile, white "flower-like" structures.  Key Features: Colonial Nature: Gorgonians are colonies of polyps, which are attached to a central axis composed of gorgonin and calcite.  Fan-like Structure: The polyps are arranged in a fan-like pattern, creating the distinctive shape of sea fans.  Color Variation: While often purple, sea fans can also be brown, yellow, or even pink, depending on environmental factors and the presence of pigments in their spicules (needle-like parts of calcium carbonate).  Filter Feeders: Sea fans are filter feeders, meaning they capture small particles of food from the water current using their tentacles.  Geographic Distribution: Common sea fans (Gorgonia ventalina) are found in the Caribbean Sea and tropical western Atlantic, including areas like the Florida Keys, Cuba, Belize, and Venezuela

    8 in stock

    €40,00

  • Last stock! Gramma loreto L

    Gramma loreto L

    3 in stock

    The royal gramma (Gramma loreto), also known as the fairy basslet, is a species of fish in the family Grammatidae native to reef environments of the tropical western Atlantic Ocean. They are commonly kept in aquariums. Appearance The fish can be a light purple to a deep violet starting at the head which fades mid-body to a golden yellow at the tail. The royal gramma will also have a small black spot on the front of the dorsal fin and a black line that streaks through the eye. It resembles the false gramma (Pictichromis paccagnellae), with the two main differences between the two being the false gramma has clear fins and does not fade, but rather has a distinct change in color. The royal gramma is relatively small, averaging slightly over 8 cm (3.1 in) and has been tank bred. The largest scientifically-measured royal gramma was 8 cm (3.1 in) long. Diet The royal gramma is a planktivore, eating mostly zooplankton and crustaceans. The royal gramma is also a cleaner fish. It removes the ectoparasites (a parasite that lives on the skin of a fish) from other fish and learns to eat dead food, such as crustaceans and fish flesh. They prefer to pick their food from the middle of the water coTheir natural range covers the Bahamas, Venezuela, Antilles, Bermuda, and through the waters surrounding Central America and the northern part of South America. The Royal Gramma tends to swim more towards the bottom with the depth range between 1 and 20 m (3 and 60 ft). In the aquarium Due to their relatively peaceful nature, diet, and small size, the royal gramma is considered an ideal inhabitant for most reef aquaria containing coral and other invertebrates. Notwithstanding this general statement, they can become aggressive towards tank-mates when kept in smaller nano reef tanks. They stake out territories throughout rocks and crevices and choose favorite hiding places. They are generally peaceful fish, but are very protective of their territories and are known for chasing out other small fish. They tend to stay in one area of the tank and, when startled, will dart back into their holes. They will vigorously guard their hiding places and, when threatened, will open their mouths wide in a threatening gesture to ward off the intruders. The royal gramma tends to orient itself to be parallel with the surface to which it is closest, resulting in the fish swimming straight up and down or sometimes upside down beneath ledges. This behavior is not to be mistaken for illness. The minimum suggested tank size is 30 gallons and the tank should not receive sharp lighting. The ideal water temperature should range between 72 and 78 °F and the water pH should be between 8.1 and 8.4, with specific gravity of 1.020–1.025. They are often kept in reef aquaria and are generally kept singly or in pairs. However, small groups can be kept as long as the tank is large enough and has enough cracks and crevices for each fish to have its own territory. The royal gramma should not be kept with its own kind unless in a formed male-female pair. It should also not be kept with larger, aggressive fish that will eat them. They are, however, resistant to most diseases and make very good beginner fish. It will also accept frozen and meaty foods, such as brine shrimp and mysis shrimp in the wild. The royal gramma is very easy to feed, but rotating their foods is said to keep them from becoming picky. Captive royal gramma will also eat flake and pellet foods. Breeding Although pairs are difficult to find because the difference between male and female is not visible, they are very easy to breed. With males usually being larger than females, the male will build the nest among rocks using pieces of algae.The male will then lead the female to the nest, where she will deposit 20–100 eggs in the nest. The male exhibits the following nest care practices: protecting the nest and eggs, ongoing maintenance, frequent debris removal, and constant barging into the nest.During the breeding period, this behavior is repeated almost every day for a month or longer. The eggs are about 1 mm (0.04 in) and are equipped with small protuberances over the surface with tiny threads extending from them. These threads hold onto the algae of the nest and keep the eggs in place. The eggs will hatch in five to seven days, normally in the evening, and can feed on rotifers until they are large enough to consume newly hatched brine shrimp

    3 in stock

    €55,00

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