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#21
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![]() I looked up assive on google... couldnt find anything relevant at all
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#22
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![]() Quote:
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__________________
Bob ----------------------------------------------------- To be loved you have to be nice to people every day - To be hated you don't have to do squat. ---------Homer Simpson-------- |
#23
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![]() Actually your favia is quite different than your zoos.
The favia deposits a calcium skeleton as it grows. It contributes to the reef structure and dead coral skeletons like that are what make up our "live rock". Zoos are like mini soft corals which have no substantial skeleton. You could cut down in between the individual polyps and easily frag zoos. With a favia, you not only need to cut through the polyp membrane, but you also need to cut through the hard coral skeleton. I would say use a knife first then a chisel, but you are opening up the tissue to infection, there's no guarantee that your chisel would cut where your tissue was cut and you could wind up losing both halves. Do you really need to frag it? I couldn't do it, myself. Mitch ![]() |
#24
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![]() Quote:
Quote:
__________________
Bob ----------------------------------------------------- To be loved you have to be nice to people every day - To be hated you don't have to do squat. ---------Homer Simpson-------- |
#25
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![]() Quote:
I would put yours up on another rock, and let it grow. Mitch |
#26
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![]() A great book with great info is Eric Borneman's Aquarium Corals Selection, Husbandry, and Natural History
Mitch |