Large percentage water change, followed in two weeks by another large percentage water change (if the first didn't work).
Kevin
I have been trying to get mine to split as well. When you say large volume water change what would be the precentages for those two water changes?
There are two forms, or types of quadricolor. A smaller colonial variety that obviously splits, and a larger solitary variety that may not split. You may have the solitary form, and no matter what you do, it may never split.
http://www.nhm.ku.edu/inverts/ebooks/ch1.html#entac
Quote from link.
" As a rule, in shallow water (e.g. on tops of reefs) polyps small (oral disc diameter 50 mm), clustered together in crevices or adjacent on coral branches, so that tentacles are confluent, forming extensive field; in deep water (e.g. on reef slopes) polyps solitary, large (to 400 mm diameter), with base anchored in deep hole."
???? Who told you that your corals can not be out of water?I can't do anymore then that amount because I have some corals on the top of my rocks and it would expose them if I took anymore water out.
good to know. thanks for the info.It depends on how often/much you change your water now. If you change your water fairly frequently (like weekly or twice a month), then a larger water change is necessary (like a 30-40% water change, but IMO, at least 3x your normal volume). If you have become lazy over the years like me (down to a 10% water change every 6-8 weeks, and sometimes longer), then doubling my water change volume and doing a second water change after a week will generally cause some of my clones to split.
With a single, large BTA that I had for a while without splitting, my plan would be to feed 3 times a week for a month, with no water changes, then do a 25% water change followed a week later by another 25% water change.
HTH,
Kevin