Snip all of the tips?

thanks for clarifying.

I've mashed up some of my mille's while taking PAR readings and noticed all the areas that I damaged started growing.

I have 2 mille colonies that I got maricultured from DiversDen.... one has grown nicely and evenly all over, the other has turned into stubby ugly branches everywhere except for 3 branches that have exploded in one direction, and those look deformed. Going to see if I can 'prune' it back into a nice form :)
 
Ryan, my red milli is similar...about 3 arms are growing ridiculously fast while the others are at a medium pace. I just fragged one of the slow branches(a week ago) and it's exploding with new growth.
 
check out garfs site ....they have been trying different ways to mount frags and playing around with clipping tips for years....check out what happens when you turn a frag upsice down.......WHEN YOU CLIP ANY PLANT YOU FORCE A SINGLE STALK TO TURN INTO A FEW STALKS....No different with a coral....
 
This has some great info. Posted in another sectio, but thought I would piggy back on this thread.

Ihave been experimenting with a "v" shaped blue tip acro that broke off the mother colony. After letting it grow out about 2 months, the "v" just got bigger with no splitting. I decided to frag it about 3 or 4 months ago. It then split three times at the tip where fragged and seemed to grow faster than some others in the tank.

My questions:

-How different are each species of acros?
-Does fragging encourage growth?
-If an acro is stagnant, should you frag? How much?
-What if the acro seems to be getting fat and shooting sprouts all from the same spot and shading lower ones?
-How do you frag when it is attached to a rock if you do not have the bone clipper?

Thanks in advance for any advice!
 
Scraped the sides of my purple slimer because it just kept growing straight across rather than expanding.. now I have 3 side branches.
Turquoise staghorn boomed after 1/16 inch cuts with a nail clipper.
Tables - expanded.
plates - even bigger.

I think this is done as a way to keep the next generation of coral alive; harm occurs, then the reproduction begins to re-establish itself.
 
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