liveforphysics
Banned
RTBA (rose tip bubble anemone) are beautiful creatures. They are rapidly harvested from natural reefs because of how beautiful they are in our aquariums. I belive that this is un-needed damage to natural reefs, because any healthy tank can produce them easily. The purpose of this post is to show how easy it is to frag RTBAs.
So, to begin, you must start with a healthy RTBA. This perticular RTBA is quite a bit larger than my clams and corals appreciate, so I will be turning him into 4 RTBAs. If he were smaller, I would just do two.
So, here is the monster, and his evil clown demon.
Pull the rock its foot is mounted to up near the surface so you can begin to scrape the foot up. It sometimes takes brutal thumb force to get a start on the foot.
Here I have a start on getting the foot up.
I stop when about 3/4th of the foot is up. If I were to just make 2 anemones, I would only pull up half the foot.
Now its time to get in there with the sisscors and line up where you want your cut lines to be. This can be really tricky to see, so do what you gotta do to unfold it and get those sisscors were you want them.
Start your cut, it can be really tough to cut through, much tougher than you would expect, so be ready for some serious cutting force. My clown was FREAKING out.
This looks terrible, but dont worry, you wont feel a thing Edges like that just heal right up, and a new mouth forms on each chunk. Its likely releaseing things into your tank that other reef animals dont appreciate, but I've never seen any problem associated with it.
Here they are roughly back in the same spot in the tank. That clown was in super ultra attack mode, so due to multiple bleeding bite wounds on my hands I decided to wait a bit for him to cool down before putting the other rocks back
I will take some update pics for you guys and try to post some data of exactly how long it takes them to heal completely and be ready to frag again. As soon as they have functioning mouths again, I will give them shrimp every other day for a week and then frag them each again. Then I will repeat the process one or two more times, but in a dedicated tank, because at that point it will be up around 30+ RTBAs.
Anyways, the goal here is that less of them will need to be taken from the wild if more people frag them. I am also guessing that RTBAs with years of tank life aclimate much better to differnt aquariums than those that are wild harvested, but I have no proof of this.
So, to begin, you must start with a healthy RTBA. This perticular RTBA is quite a bit larger than my clams and corals appreciate, so I will be turning him into 4 RTBAs. If he were smaller, I would just do two.
So, here is the monster, and his evil clown demon.
Pull the rock its foot is mounted to up near the surface so you can begin to scrape the foot up. It sometimes takes brutal thumb force to get a start on the foot.
Here I have a start on getting the foot up.
I stop when about 3/4th of the foot is up. If I were to just make 2 anemones, I would only pull up half the foot.
Now its time to get in there with the sisscors and line up where you want your cut lines to be. This can be really tricky to see, so do what you gotta do to unfold it and get those sisscors were you want them.
Start your cut, it can be really tough to cut through, much tougher than you would expect, so be ready for some serious cutting force. My clown was FREAKING out.
This looks terrible, but dont worry, you wont feel a thing Edges like that just heal right up, and a new mouth forms on each chunk. Its likely releaseing things into your tank that other reef animals dont appreciate, but I've never seen any problem associated with it.
Here they are roughly back in the same spot in the tank. That clown was in super ultra attack mode, so due to multiple bleeding bite wounds on my hands I decided to wait a bit for him to cool down before putting the other rocks back
I will take some update pics for you guys and try to post some data of exactly how long it takes them to heal completely and be ready to frag again. As soon as they have functioning mouths again, I will give them shrimp every other day for a week and then frag them each again. Then I will repeat the process one or two more times, but in a dedicated tank, because at that point it will be up around 30+ RTBAs.
Anyways, the goal here is that less of them will need to be taken from the wild if more people frag them. I am also guessing that RTBAs with years of tank life aclimate much better to differnt aquariums than those that are wild harvested, but I have no proof of this.