shred5
Premium Member
I am glad that the Magnifica regain his healthy. Whether the transplant help or not in this case is immaterial. He got better. Unless we can do control trials we cannot accurately determine the effects of transplant. Doing a control trial is just out of the range of my resources at this time. I cannot see attempting transplant would hurt anything other than remove a tentacles or two from the donor anemone, which he can easily tolerate.
Think of transplant in this case like the clam farmer ground up a clam and put this slurry in the baby tank so that the baby clams get the zooxanthellae they needed. This step vastly improve the survival of baby clams.
We (at least I) can assume that the anemone is completely bleached if after several months in optimal condition, it does not gain his color back. We assume that anemone initially obtain their zooxanthellae by ingesting them, so the best way fur us to give zooxanthellae is to let him ingesting it. I suppose we can inject it via a syringe, but I would not recommend this since this will injure the anemone.
I agree that is it great it has been saved. I been working with one for about 6 months now that was completely bleached, I mean as white as snow. The base was blue. It turned brown several months ago, it looked about as ugly as they get. I am now trying to bring the pigments back. I will post pictures soon. I did not take any before pictures because I hate to jinx myself. But anyway he is starting to color up nice.
My only fear really is where the zooxanthellae come from. If coming from a anemone it is not compatible with it could cause some issue unless the zooxanthellae are isolated from any tissue.