Hello!
I had an interesting idea and wanted to get everyone’s thoughts.
From what I’ve observed and what I’ve heard from other reefers many tenuis Acropora seem to prioritize encrusting the base and sending out new branches rather than continuing to grow from the original cut nub.
That got me wondering: if that’s the case, would there be any benefit to making a partial cut (around ¾ of the way through) on a Walt Disney frag and then laying it on its side to encourage faster encrustation and potentially create more branching points?
Has anyone experimented with something like this or seen it done before?
I had an interesting idea and wanted to get everyone’s thoughts.
From what I’ve observed and what I’ve heard from other reefers many tenuis Acropora seem to prioritize encrusting the base and sending out new branches rather than continuing to grow from the original cut nub.
That got me wondering: if that’s the case, would there be any benefit to making a partial cut (around ¾ of the way through) on a Walt Disney frag and then laying it on its side to encourage faster encrustation and potentially create more branching points?
Has anyone experimented with something like this or seen it done before?
