650-IS350
Active member
Nice to hear that J-QUad.
My suggestion would be to frag those tank propagated polyps ( NEW POLYPS ) off the wild colony. Just in case something goes wrong with it. At least the new growth goes on a separate frag and less worry if the wild colony gets pox again or goes through a melting phase. Since the new polyps will be more tolerant to the tank conditions, you'd basically be breeding a better strand of polyps more accepting of our tank conditions than their wild counterparts. I hope you get what I'm saying.
I was trying to do that with a couple of colonies till the melting/pox issue hit the roof on them.
My suggestion would be to frag those tank propagated polyps ( NEW POLYPS ) off the wild colony. Just in case something goes wrong with it. At least the new growth goes on a separate frag and less worry if the wild colony gets pox again or goes through a melting phase. Since the new polyps will be more tolerant to the tank conditions, you'd basically be breeding a better strand of polyps more accepting of our tank conditions than their wild counterparts. I hope you get what I'm saying.
I was trying to do that with a couple of colonies till the melting/pox issue hit the roof on them.