From what I could tell at best on what you have in your pics
#1 Palythoa - lately I have seen them called mint chocolate chips. best I can tell from pic they will look best under actinics
#2 Zoa - I have seen your variety called Eagle Eyes best I can remember
#4 Zoa - These are commonly call peanut butter cups.
Of course names will vary from vendor to vendor but those are fairly common varieties and names. #1 looks like the "sea mat" (my terminology might be off) version of Paly, kinda tough to tell. Just watch for when they are budding, if you see the new polyps splitting out the side of its parents stalk and not from the base of the mat then they are the "sea mat" type. Also handle #1 very carefully they are likely the most toxic animal you have in the tank. If you have a metallic taste in your mouth the next day after handling them then the Palytoxin got you. Paly's are also able to hold of the advance of war corals and a few other varieties of stinging LPS. I have examples in one of my tanks 3 diff varieties of #1.
#2 and #4 are basic Zoanthids and will bud new polyps from their base. #4 is a very fast grower, 20 polyps cab become a thousand in a years time. I'm just letting you know so if you have an area in mind for them to grow you can intentionally isolate them to slow their advance.
#1 can handle most ranges of lighting and flow. < they will even eat bits of shrimp
#3 and #4 likes med to lower light and med-low flow < these two likely will never respond to meaty foods
#5 will do best in med-low light with low flow. in my experience higher flows make them shrink.
Hope some of this will help. just ask me any questions you might have, I quit counting the varieties of coral I propagate after I passed 100, so I might have a version of most coral you will find.
Congrats on the setup!
Tom
#1 Palythoa - lately I have seen them called mint chocolate chips. best I can tell from pic they will look best under actinics
#2 Zoa - I have seen your variety called Eagle Eyes best I can remember
#4 Zoa - These are commonly call peanut butter cups.
Of course names will vary from vendor to vendor but those are fairly common varieties and names. #1 looks like the "sea mat" (my terminology might be off) version of Paly, kinda tough to tell. Just watch for when they are budding, if you see the new polyps splitting out the side of its parents stalk and not from the base of the mat then they are the "sea mat" type. Also handle #1 very carefully they are likely the most toxic animal you have in the tank. If you have a metallic taste in your mouth the next day after handling them then the Palytoxin got you. Paly's are also able to hold of the advance of war corals and a few other varieties of stinging LPS. I have examples in one of my tanks 3 diff varieties of #1.
#2 and #4 are basic Zoanthids and will bud new polyps from their base. #4 is a very fast grower, 20 polyps cab become a thousand in a years time. I'm just letting you know so if you have an area in mind for them to grow you can intentionally isolate them to slow their advance.
#1 can handle most ranges of lighting and flow. < they will even eat bits of shrimp
#3 and #4 likes med to lower light and med-low flow < these two likely will never respond to meaty foods
#5 will do best in med-low light with low flow. in my experience higher flows make them shrink.
Hope some of this will help. just ask me any questions you might have, I quit counting the varieties of coral I propagate after I passed 100, so I might have a version of most coral you will find.
Congrats on the setup!
Tom