Hi Anthony (and anyone else who's doing this) I've been plowing through the fav links here and at Marine Depot and see reference after reference to axial cuts of stony corals into 1/4 inch discs. This makes complete sense from the perspective of various articles in that it make the best use of coral biomass into marketable frags.
The only disconnect is the rule of thumb I've seen about making very tiny frags and reduced mortality. I'm assuming that the axial cuts work best when the coral is in monoculture to reduce post-fragging stress. Is it the allelopathy that reduces the viability of small frags when multiple types of corals are fragged together?
Anyway, this is what I gathered from putting together a lot of different farming and fragging articles in my head, so essentially I'm just looking to make sure I didn't completely misunderstand something along the way!
Also, if anyone has pictures of stony corals growing out after being sliced into discs on a wet-saw, I'd love to see them!
As many others have said, thanks for the wealth of info that you've provided into the hobby as well as injecting MANY doses of reality on farming, the industry, and reducing the footprint of our hobby on the reefs. Keep up the good work!
Josh
P.S. I'm about to start building a farm system with three 6' x 3' by 16" plywood tanks. Eventually I'd like to expand into an outdoor greenhouse, but I must convince my wife that it's feasible! Anyway, I look forward to the new edition of the BOCP and I'll be ordering some posters soon!
The only disconnect is the rule of thumb I've seen about making very tiny frags and reduced mortality. I'm assuming that the axial cuts work best when the coral is in monoculture to reduce post-fragging stress. Is it the allelopathy that reduces the viability of small frags when multiple types of corals are fragged together?
Anyway, this is what I gathered from putting together a lot of different farming and fragging articles in my head, so essentially I'm just looking to make sure I didn't completely misunderstand something along the way!
Also, if anyone has pictures of stony corals growing out after being sliced into discs on a wet-saw, I'd love to see them!
As many others have said, thanks for the wealth of info that you've provided into the hobby as well as injecting MANY doses of reality on farming, the industry, and reducing the footprint of our hobby on the reefs. Keep up the good work!
Josh
P.S. I'm about to start building a farm system with three 6' x 3' by 16" plywood tanks. Eventually I'd like to expand into an outdoor greenhouse, but I must convince my wife that it's feasible! Anyway, I look forward to the new edition of the BOCP and I'll be ordering some posters soon!