Coral Chart [PDF added]

Discussion in 'Coral' started by Seano Hermano, Nov 14, 2011.

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  1. Seano Hermano

    Seano Hermano Giant Squid

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    Someone on my local forum posted this chart and I thought I would share it. I am not sure of its exactness, but it shows care requirements for specific corals, based on their species. Apparently it was created my a member of another forum.

    Right click on the image and "View Image" to zoom in.
    [​IMG]

    Edit: Image above has been retyped into an excel document. You can now download the PDF to your computer. the first attachment does not fit on a full page. This is if you wish to print it. The second attachment ("computerview") fits on one page wide so you can zoom in on the text.
     

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    Last edited: Nov 15, 2011
    2 people like this.
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  3. thepanfish

    thepanfish Flying Squid

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    Seems like a good guideline,if you could read it that is...
     
  4. Seano Hermano

    Seano Hermano Giant Squid

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    Is it pixelated when you zoom in? Photobucket may have resided it. I'll take a look at it.
     
  5. sticksmith23

    sticksmith23 Giant Squid

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    It is pixelated when you zoom in. It looks like an excel document that someone took a pic of or scanned as a pic. It would be awesome to get the original document.
     
  6. Seano Hermano

    Seano Hermano Giant Squid

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    Lets try this again...
     

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    Last edited: Nov 15, 2011
  7. Seano Hermano

    Seano Hermano Giant Squid

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    Well that didn't help. The photo is big. But when I upload it photobucket reduces the size. :(

     
    Last edited: Nov 15, 2011
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  9. ReefBruh

    ReefBruh Giant Squid

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    I right clicked on it and then hit the view tab and when it showed up on a new page I put the cursor over it and clicked it. It is readable then depending on how your eyesight is.
     
  10. barbianj

    barbianj Hammer Head Shark

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    In Chrome it's ctrl +. I can read it fine. Even with my bad eyesight. :p
     
  11. Seano Hermano

    Seano Hermano Giant Squid

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    Is it still small/pixelated though in Google Chrome?

    I am retyping it in Excel as we speak. lol. I am at the H's going down the list. I will export it as a pdf so you can save it.
     
    Last edited: Nov 15, 2011
  12. m2434

    m2434 Giant Squid

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    Cool, but what is "high" light, or "extremely high" light? Some people would call 200 PAR high and others 300 PAR low. I think most would agree that clams need "extremely high" light, but tabling acros are listed in the chart as "extremely high" and most would probably agree they don't need as much as a clam. Maybe there should be a "super duper extremely high" category :) Also, corals often share common names, so, lack of specific scientific names is sort of confusing. Great idea though and a excellent start; certainly a lot better than most of the charts out there.