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Why do anemones clone?
I bought a small (2-3 inches) GBTA clone from someone a few months ago. Now it has cloned itself again. I thought it might do this a some point, maybe when it was full grown but like I said it's just a small one. Is this typical? Why do they clone in the first place? And why would mine clone at such a young age?
Thanks for any info. Mike |
did you want to sell it? and do you have a pic?
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i wish i knew, i have a huge condy that could use a downsize.
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If you have been feeding it well,it may have cloned due to favorable conditions.But then they will also clone in poor conditions as a survival tactic.So its hard to say why they clone :razz: BTW the size of an anemone isn't an indication of age.It does take time for one to get big,but depending on conditions,another of the same age may stay small it whole life.Or keep splitting like yours seems to be doing.Nice to have a splitter:biggrin:
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I haven't a clue why my GBTA has split 5 times over the last 14 months. It seems to get to a certain size, then wham! it splits. My RBTA, on the other hand, has not split once in the 13 months we've had it. Go figure.
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When I wanted to make my RBTA's split I fed heavily for a couple of weeks then stopped feeding. I read about this somewhere on the internet and it worked, who knows why. I haven't fed the anemones for the past year or so and they have not split again.
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LMK Mike |
I wish mine would clone but they just keep growing. Dinner plate size & up. The only one that "cloned" was one that got ripped in 2 accidentally during the tank transfer. Fortunately, both are alive & doing well.
Anthony |
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Just a thought :) |
I've had mine split quite a few times. I normaly don't feed them that often and when I start feeding them is usualy when they split.
I don't why.:question: |
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