BonsaiNut
Premium Member
Now we do know that some of the split Carpet frag survived, I would keep an open mind about this.
Did I miss something?
Now we do know that some of the split Carpet frag survived, I would keep an open mind about this.
Several people here on Reef Central have had Gigantea that show evidence of been cut and survived. There are Gigantea that accidently got torn and survived.Did I miss something?
Several people here on Reef Central have had Gigantea that show evidence of been cut and survived. There are Gigantea that accidently got torn and survived.
No one would argue though, that just because you can cut a dog and have it live, that there is any reason to believe you could cut a dog IN HALF and have it live and end up with two dogs. It is nonsensical.
It appears that the ethical line to culture gigs is very hard to draw. On the one hand you have a precedent of BTAs making it through cuts and on the other hand you have very limited (if any) evidence of Stichodactyla anemone propagation. Tough call because it would be thrilling to see fragged carpet anemones surviving long term but how to get there is a very difficult path to figure out and I'm not ready to take a strong stand on either side of the issue just yet. You never want to give up on innovation and discovery if there is even a small chance of it going anywhere.
It appears that the ethical line to culture gigs is very hard to draw. On the one hand you have a precedent of BTAs making it through cuts and on the other hand you have very limited (if any) evidence of Stichodactyla anemone propagation. Tough call because it would be thrilling to see fragged carpet anemones surviving long term but how to get there is a very difficult path to figure out and I'm not ready to take a strong stand on either side of the issue just yet. You never want to give up on innovation and discovery if there is even a small chance of it going anywhere.
Right now I don't think it's an ethical boundary, I think it's simply science. BTA's and Magnifica anemones are the only two hosting anemones that reproduce by asexual reproduction. I think our efforts are better put forth towards figuring out how to sexually reproduce anemones.
Right now I don't think it's an ethical boundary, I think it's simply science. BTA's and Magnifica anemones are the only two hosting anemones that reproduce by asexual reproduction. I think our efforts are better put forth towards figuring out how to sexually reproduce anemones.
Both. We put 25-30 gigs under lab conditions for propagation. We also put 30-40 of them for sexual reproductive experience. Each experiment must be well documented and improved. Again, I would only support something like that in real laboratories under supervision of marine biologists instead of hobby experiments. If takes that many anemones to potentially discover "the cure" then I am all for it than losing gigs in transship, whole sale, LFS and hobbyist aquariums without any end of it in sight. In other words the real motive here is to stop or limit the collection of anemones without banning their sales outright.Now imagine if we could figure out how to do the same with S. gigantea. Would you rather chop your gigantea in half with a 1% chance that either half might survive? Or would you rather get your gigantea to spawn and leave you with 1000 babies... and do it over and over and over every month. You decide...
I can imagine you would need a very well thought out system.
…well funded systems and highly trained individuals. Can't have a bunch of ignorant hobbyists randomly splitting anemones like its a piece of cake. Well funded and highly trained individuals is what's probably an issue. Not sure who or what would want to finance such an endeavor. National Science Foundation awarded $850,000 to Dr. Robert Drew to study clownfish/anemone symbiosis. I am sure studying anemone reproduction would take a lot more money than that.
Perhaps these anemones are too niche.
In general, as far as your first suggestion goes, I would think we would want to have some inkling that there was a chance of success before we started killing anemones just to satisfy our curiosity.
All that said, I think it's just a matter of time before we see baby gigantea.