Hopefully you have been provided or visualized for yourself some documentation beyond the provided pictures a few days post manual division. Most folks with a knife can replicate the pictured level of "success story.".....
...so much about being misled, its been 3 months and as i said both are alive and well, I'm not promoting it, or parading it here as a "success story" just backing up my chit-chat that it can be done provided that anemone being cut is healthy aquarium accustomed specimen and that you know what are you doing and how to do it right.
Hopefully you have been provided or visualized for yourself some documentation beyond the provided pictures a few days post manual division. Most folks with a knife can replicate the pictured level of "success story."
Stretching it out a year with both halves surviving would be quite the accomplishment. I certainly hope folks find the trick to promote a full regeneration in Stichodactyla sp., but I have yet to see long term evidence of such manual division success in captivity.
elegance coral said:Mario,
If you are interested in the propagation of these anemones, you are setting up the perfect system to attempt it. Male haddoni's often spawn in captivity, and there's been cases of females releasing eggs in shipping bags. If you set up a system with multiple haddoni's, you have a good chance of having at least one male and one female. Given that sexual reproduction is the only known form of reproduction in this species, it only seems logical that this is where we should concentrate efforts of propagation. It's been done with H. crispa in captivity so why not haddoni?
Lookin good! Do you plan on adding sand to the tank?
i was gonna ask the same question. if you are going to do it, i would suggest you NOT use new sand. but i guess person with your expereince, i did not need to suggest that as you already know.
Best of luck to you especially the anemone!