Best way to get RBTA to split?

I don't think cutting an anemone in half to make two is in general something to object against. It is for sure better than taking them from the reef.
Keep in mind that for every anemone that is taken from the reef you also loose a pair of clownfish in the wild.

But with cutting anemone you cut a single poly in half and you always risk infection and loss. And so far - to my knowledge - it is only done (successfully) with Entacmaea quadricolor (BTA) which are the lesser threatened species in the wild.
I don't know if this propagation method could also work for the other important host anemones Heteractis crispa (12 clownfish species), H. magnifica (12), Stichodactyla mertensii (12), S. gigantean (7) and S. haddoni (6). I myself would be very hesitant to cut one of those in half. With those I would rather try to artificially induce spawning.
But for sustainability we need to find a way to propagate these in captivity too.

Fragging a coral is a bit of a different thing as you don't cut a single polyp in half but separate a polyp cluster.

In any way I think fragging is in general a good thing as it allows to easily propagate corals in captivity and therefore limits the need for harvesting corals from the reefs.
And it is hard if not impossible to match the light and current flow for a large wild coral to what it had adapted to on the reef. But the fragments can much easier adapt to a new location and grow accordingly.
I tried to keep corals in the 90s but it was always hit and miss. I only got a few to survive and grow. But now I have so far not lost a single fragment and all are growing.

Other than BTAs, the only other anemones that can be force propogated with success are S. tapetum and H. magnifica (with limited success). All documented attempts to force propogate S. gigantea, S. mertensii, and S. haddoni have ended in failure. There are some S. gigantea that have signs of being cut (scars, odd oval shape with a "tucked" area, lack of siphonoglyphs, etc.). I had a purple one that lasted about 9 months, then died for no reason:

http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2289406

I don't mean to derail this thread. But for others who are reading this thread I always try to let people know that cutting an anemone, other than BTAs (and mini-maxis) should not be attempted.
 
putting a rock on an anenome may potentially kill it.

"stabbing" it in the wrong place will KILL it.

stabbing it multiple times may stress it to death..

fragging a coral is not "Just stab in multiple places"


LOL, I was not advocating that method, and I hope it was originally said tongue in cheek. I was responding to the many that said splitting a BTA was morally wrong.
 
I had an anemone that split a lot of times (RBTA). Once I introduced some other species it seems to have stopped splitting. I later found out I had Dinoflangettes(??spelling??) and did a 3 day blackout and a 25% water change. It split within a week or two after that. Not sure if any of it is related but thought I would share.
 
What is your alkalinity?

Might be anecdotal only but my clone BTA split the day after I dosed for alkalinity when i realized it had dropped pretty low for some reason. It had gotten pretty big but I had no idea a 4 month old nem would split and mine did into 3.
 
Perhaps just anecdotal, but my RBTAs started splitting like crazy shortly after adding a significant amount of flow. They would split once or twice every year under relatively low flow in their part of the tank. Since I added another MP40 to their part of the tank a couple months ago, they have been splitting quite regularly.
 
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