Dragon Flame

In the original media bag. I distributed three quarters of it out my tank and my tubs outside for my phytoplankton. I'll try to post a pic in a second.
 
Ok see if this comes up
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This is the overflow into my DT sump. It's bare bottom except for some of the GFO that escaped into the corner. I'm really enjoying this dragon breath/flame.."a rose by any other name would smell as sweet". I'm helping one of my LFS owners grow it so eventually it has to leave my care. If he doesn't already know how to mount it , I will give him all your suggestions.
 
your links don't work for me :idea: but i copied and pasted them into a new tab and the images are nice :rollface: - the stuff in-tank looks really good - thanks!
 
Hey guys. Any updates on results using superglue vs epoxy vs rubber bands or nylon thread? I'm about ready to mount a little frag I got to keep for my efforts. I re-read this thread and realized that -results over time- would be the deciding factor for me. Any input would be great.
 
What I have is byrothamnion from reef cleaners. The glued pieces have held up just fine with no die off. I super glued some to plugs and tied some to rubble with fishing line and both have grown exactly the same fwiw
 
Can't compare bryothamnion to dragon's flame, very very different macroalgae. Bryothamnion does quite well being superglued, as its so stiff and rough textured.
 
I did some trimming on both my dragon's flame and bryothamnion this weekend. The bryothamion super glues well... I was actually trimming an old piece I had super glued a few months ago to a frag plug. I did a combination of superglue and epoxy on the dragon's flame. The dragon's flame seems much more sensitive to the superglue. For one of the frags, I glued several smaller pieces together with a lot of superglue (to hold all the pieces together) and covered with a bit of epoxy. Many of the pieces turned orange at the base and broke off the next day. The larger frag I used a small amount of superglue but put a lot more epoxy over the top and it seems to be doing better than the other. The original frag of dragon's flame I have is epoxied and has held up great since getting it a few months ago, hence needing to trim it.
 
So Do yall trim this and instead of throwing it away do you feed it to tangs or what?

I had some of this at one time and would like to find a small frag of it once again.
 
I had a peice of Dragons breath about 2+ inches long and maybe 1/2" wide. I used super glue gel. It got to be about the size of half a softball and from the swaying current it broke off. Tiny pieces that had broken off I also glued them to rubble and nothing has "died" they seem to brake off if current is too strong.
 
The whole algae piece doesn't die, its the part that's encased in the superglue that dies off, and the algae breaks free as nothing is holding it any more. Using a zip tie is best as it doesn't kill the anchored part of the algae. Superglue may work for a time, but isn't a long term anchor solution.
 
Checked today as for I have been running my son's tank lights out now for several months while I completed the 180 in wall. The dragons breath is still alive. While its only about a half in long. With lights going it should come right back. I had to trim the heck out of it in his tank it grew so fast.

I bought it about a year ago it was attached with epoxy and is still that way today. I had fragged a couple pieces with super glue gel and it did as yall mention died inside the glue and broke off.

So the epoxy has let it hang on all this time so not sure what cause it to not break off.
 
I grow them from what I call blisters, it is much harder this way but it gives me 100 percent success and endless amounts of new growth, but you need to know Halymenia and ocean life styles to do it this way.
Plus i am a horticulturalist by trade, so it's not that hard, lol.
I make the growth from similar ways as to land plants.
First up I make them produce these blisters then proper gate like you would with morphs.
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Growth from blisters.
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Multiple blisters placed and attached on rock then new growth.
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New blisters with good growth in strong light.
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Weak growth from these blisters with low light.
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liquidg, is there a secret to getting the blisters to form? The large colony I had all grew from just the one blister attached to rock, making it really difficult to try and frag when it got big. Also, how do you remove the new growth blister and attach it to a new rock?
 
liquidg, is there a secret to getting the blisters to form? The large colony I had all grew from just the one blister attached to rock, making it really difficult to try and frag when it got big. Also, how do you remove the new growth blister and attach it to a new rock?

I will do up a thread on it all when I get a chance.
 
Are the 'Blisters" you named collected at the fronds after the plant has reached certain period of growth? I've doing something similar by cutting the blisters from another type of Halymenia algae and glued to a pc. of rubble and it ends up in growing another new plant.
 
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