Can people share some maricultured “wins”?100% agreed, I’ve only gotten lucky once with a yellow/green colony. Part of the fun is if they stay, again we’re just full blown addicts with this hobby.
Here are some of mine:
Can people share some maricultured “wins”?100% agreed, I’ve only gotten lucky once with a yellow/green colony. Part of the fun is if they stay, again we’re just full blown addicts with this hobby.
Probably all dead? Sucks that we gamble like this with living organisms. Very low survival rate from the ocean to a holding tank to a home tank. Wish we’d be more responsibleHow did the last batch do folks? Didn’t see a lot of success with these last round…at least none of yall posted anything other than they were fading out.
Probably all dead? Sucks that we gamble like this with living organisms. Very low survival rate from the ocean to a holding tank to a home tank. Wish we’d be more responsibleHow did the last batch do folks? Didn’t see a lot of success with these last round…at least none of yall posted anything other than they were fading out.
If you have a tank that grows SPS well the survival rate of marineculture should be very high. If people want to increase chances of the SPS pulling through they should frag the colony immediately. That helps ensures high light and flow to all pieces and increases the number of shots on goal significantly.Probably all dead? Sucks that we gamble like this with living organisms. Very low survival rate from the ocean to a holding tank to a home tank. Wish we’d be more responsible
Probably all dead? Sucks that we gamble like this with living organisms. Very low survival rate from the ocean to a holding tank to a home tank. Wish we’d be more responsible
You should also not assume that these SPS colonies come straight from the ocean. The largest operations in Indonesia, Australia, and Malaysia are increasingly keeping the best cool they find in the wild and then grow them up in tanks with water piped in from the ocean. You can sometimes tell by looking at what the coral is mounted on, encrusting pattern, and shape. It is not only coral distributors in the US and Europe who are growing coral in tanks for sale.Probably all dead? Sucks that we gamble like this with living organisms. Very low survival rate from the ocean to a holding tank to a home tank. Wish we’d be more responsible
When you frag a colony. It puts the frag into survival mode. If it’s a healthy frag it will do well if it was weak it will rtn in a few days to weeks. But yes. Most of your thinking is correct. Young Jedi.They come on grow discs with little tags on them, meaning they're maricultured: coral farmers collect some frags and culture those strains intensively close to shore
In my experience mariculture rarely morph into anything "insane crazy" like vivid confetti, but they end up looking pretty nice.
They're hardy if you treat them well. They tend to do better chopped up - my guess is that their morphology changes in response to the amount of flow in the ocean, and when taken back into a tank with relatively very low flow, they no longer get sufficient flow to the middle of the colony
Mariculture is close to shore in similar conditions to the ocean, and its native water, save for a few variables. I don’t mean to come off as an a-hole, far from it. I’ve seen some very cool survivors, but those are usually limited to farms who practice a very high degree of specialization - not saying hobbyists can’t succeed. Just lower rates of success is all.You should also not assume that these SPS colonies come straight from the ocean. The largest operations in Indonesia, Australia, and Malaysia are increasingly keeping the best cool they find in the wild and then grow them up in tanks with water piped in from the ocean. You can sometimes tell by looking at what the coral is mounted on, encrusting pattern, and shape. It is not only coral distributors in the US and Europe who are growing coral in tanks for sale.
No worries. Many of the hobbiest who purchase these colonies are degenerate coral gamblers. Every once in a while the lotto hits!Mariculture is close to shore in similar conditions to the ocean, and its native water, save for a few variables. I don’t mean to come off as an a-hole, far from it. I’ve seen some very cool survivors, but those are usually limited to farms who practice a very high degree of specialization - not saying hobbyists can’t succeed. Just lower rates of success is all.