Stoney Mahony
New member
I have three years twords a biology degree and have alot of experience growing plants. I have noticed many similarities between growing plants and corals, here are a few:
- Temperature has a lot to do with the structure of a plant. Higher growing temperatures often result in a thinner faster growing stem where lower temps result in a thicker stalk but shorter/slower growth. Corals seem very similar in that they will grow and metabolize faster in warm water but will result in thinner branches and bases. Cold water creates very thick, massive branches but slower growth rates.
-Yellow light spectrum around 2-3K on plants produces thin, fast growth. Blue produces thick, slow growth. I would say that we see this same thing happen when you compare corals grown under 6500K and 20K lighting.
- Plants produce an axial hormone at the top or in tallest branch. This hormone makes it grow faster than any other branch and it will stay the tallest unless something happens to it. If you cut that branch, then the next tallest starts producing the hormone and takes its place. If there is no single but several branches are the same height, they will all produce the hormone and experience a burst of rapid growth. I am not sure if there is a hormone involved but I see the same thing happen in branching SPS corals! If the tallest branch is broken, the next tallest start to take off and take its place. I have seen plenty of pictures of corals that look like long branches and the I have seen pictures of the same coral that has been fragged several times it it resembles more or a bush. Since there are so many types of corals and they all have specific growth patterns(some naturally bushy), there will be different variations displayed in each species.
-The new research shows that it is better to mount your frag on its side and this makes alot of sense. If you glue a frag with the cut end down, the tip will start to grow and it will slowly encrust at the base. When you glue the frag on its side, there is not tallest tip so it will quickly encrust. All of the tiny nodes will compete to be the tallest. After a few weeks you will see several axial tips that are all growing rapidly. This will result in a fuller colony that looks much more natural like it would on a reef.
What are your thoughts/experiences on this?
- Temperature has a lot to do with the structure of a plant. Higher growing temperatures often result in a thinner faster growing stem where lower temps result in a thicker stalk but shorter/slower growth. Corals seem very similar in that they will grow and metabolize faster in warm water but will result in thinner branches and bases. Cold water creates very thick, massive branches but slower growth rates.
-Yellow light spectrum around 2-3K on plants produces thin, fast growth. Blue produces thick, slow growth. I would say that we see this same thing happen when you compare corals grown under 6500K and 20K lighting.
- Plants produce an axial hormone at the top or in tallest branch. This hormone makes it grow faster than any other branch and it will stay the tallest unless something happens to it. If you cut that branch, then the next tallest starts producing the hormone and takes its place. If there is no single but several branches are the same height, they will all produce the hormone and experience a burst of rapid growth. I am not sure if there is a hormone involved but I see the same thing happen in branching SPS corals! If the tallest branch is broken, the next tallest start to take off and take its place. I have seen plenty of pictures of corals that look like long branches and the I have seen pictures of the same coral that has been fragged several times it it resembles more or a bush. Since there are so many types of corals and they all have specific growth patterns(some naturally bushy), there will be different variations displayed in each species.
-The new research shows that it is better to mount your frag on its side and this makes alot of sense. If you glue a frag with the cut end down, the tip will start to grow and it will slowly encrust at the base. When you glue the frag on its side, there is not tallest tip so it will quickly encrust. All of the tiny nodes will compete to be the tallest. After a few weeks you will see several axial tips that are all growing rapidly. This will result in a fuller colony that looks much more natural like it would on a reef.
What are your thoughts/experiences on this?