is it possible to help an anenome split? i have a radianthus anenome that clearly has 2 heads but won't split the rest of the way. it was purchased on 6/4 and was that way when bought. i'm just curious. thanks, jessica
is it possible to help an anenome split? i have a radianthus anenome that clearly has 2 heads but won't split the rest of the way. it was purchased on 6/4 and was that way when bought. i'm just curious. thanks, jessica
I've heard you can help speed the natural split in this way.....
Feed it well for a week or so. Then do a big water change. I guess the idea is to stress it a little bit. This way, it splits so that there are two chances for survival rather than one.
Anyway, this is what I heard somewhere. I don't know if it works. It makes sense to me. I thought that my green BTA was going to split, so I was ready to try it. Then it moved to a different spot in the tank and it didn't look like it wanted to split anymore. Strange thing, huh?
I've heard you can help speed the natural split in this way.....
Feed it well for a week or so. Then do a big water change. I guess the idea is to stress it a little bit. This way, it splits so that there are two chances for survival rather than one.
Anyway, this is what I heard somewhere. I don't know if it works. It makes sense to me. I thought that my green BTA was going to split, so I was ready to try it. Then it moved to a different spot in the tank and it didn't look like it wanted to split anymore. Strange thing, huh?
I've done the split with a knife before on a RBTA. It works, but it's pretty traumatic. But, then again, so is a split, if you've ever seen one!
As noted above, I'd feed the heck out of it and then do a massive water change. See if that helps it along.
Bill
215g FOWLR... and anemones, GSP, gorgonians... carp, that isn't FO!
"I killed my first SW Fish in 1971..."
thank you for the advice. i will try that and see if it works.![]()