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#1
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Mushroom reproduction
I just got my first shroom yesterday and i was wondering how the big mushroom makes small mushrooms and how long it takes.
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#2
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depends on the shroom really, ive had shrooms and ricords take off then some just do nothing....
__________________
Treefer a new line of cologne for men, mixes the fresh musk of the canibis plants with the newly charcoled smell of it going up in smoke |
#3
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My very first mushroom, which is now just six months old, keeps moving jus slightly up the rock I have it on and as it moves it leaves little pieces behind that grow into new mushrooms. It's the only one I've left alone long enough to reproduce on its own, the rest I have helped by slicing them up.
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#4
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Shrooms reproduce growing another mouth and splitting or by leaving a piece of its base which turns into a new shroom. Ive also heard people say their shrooms spit pieces of flesh out that grow into shrooms, but I havent experienced this myself.
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90 gal reef LPS, Softies, and Gorgonians Pair of Ocellaris Clownfish School of 5 Green Chromis Blue Morpho Tang Yellow Tang Pink Spotted Goby |
#5
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so if your mushroom is attached can you break it off the rock to help it reproduce, or will this just kill it
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#6
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Cut it off the rock with a razor. The foot that is left will regrow another shroom. The cut piece can be reattached to rock by various methods. If you want a bunch of shrooms, cut the piece you cut from the foot into a bunch of pieces and just throw the mess in the tank. Wherever they decide to land you will have another shroom start.
__________________
If you can't laugh at yourself you have no right to laugh at all. |
#7
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Mushroom Reproduction
There's a pretty interesting article in Aug/Sep Coral Magazine demonstrating how to "force" Ricordia's to reproduce (or split). From what I gathered, it's done by cementing the Ricordias foot on some substrate, then cementing the Ricordia's petal to a separate piece of substrate. Position them so gravity assists the footed piece to separate itself from the cemented petal thus leaving two Ricordia's once it naturally seprates.
I'm trying one now...I'll let ya know if it works for me. I'm doing a Rainbow Ricordia...they go anywhere from $45 to $75 a piece here in Vegas so if I can get them to split myself.....might save a few bucks huh? Cheers |
#8
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is there a link to this article
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#9
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Quote:
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#10
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Mushroom Repro
I don't think the mag is available on-line....only hard copy.
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#11
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explain then again what your attempting, your putting the base on one piece, and apart of the top of the mushroom on another setting this piece lower so gravity forces them to split.
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#12
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can you post a pic of what your doing so i can follow along
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#13
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Mushroom Repro
Let me see if I can either find something from the author on-line or if I can take pics of the magazine article pics. They are much better than what I can show you since theirs are in steps.
I'll post a follow-up message shortly... |
#14
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Induced Longitudinal Fission
OK, the author of the article is Daniel Knop and the process is called Induced Longitudinal Fission. Based on a quick Google search, it appears the process of Longitudinal Fission is used on life forms other than Corallimorpharians as well. Mr Knops' article, titled "All About Corallimorpharians" addresses everything from Petal Lacerations, Asexual Propogation, Budding, Inverse Budding, etc. and it is awesome!!
I'm trying to be careful not to cross any legal boundries with Mr Knop's article and research so for legal reasons I've decided not to post any of his pictures from the magazine article. It's only $6.95 and every issue is well worth it. If your LFS or book store doesn't carry Coral Magazine, you can go on-line @ www.coralmagazine.com , or call their order number (714) 543-4100 and order it there. (No, I do not work for, nor am I affiliated with Coral Magazine) If you're interested in a fascinating read, I'd highly recommend getting the Aug/Sep issue (Volume 4, Number 4) of Coral Magazine. It's entirely dedicated to Corallimorpharians. |
#15
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my mushroom seems to b moving down the rock so im hopin he will leave a little treat 4 my tank
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#16
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Hi. I've noticed with my yumas that came on split pieces of rubble that when I cut off a piece of rubble with some base attached that the piece with a little flesh on it grows what looks to be a green node (seem to fluoresce under my 420/460 T5 lights). I've also seen two yumas that have put out a thin extension of their fleshy base across the rock their on, and these extensions are developing the same little green nodes. I'm assuming that these green nodes will grow into new yumas? The color of the nodes seems to be the same bright green color of the mouths. If these will indeed be new yumas does the mouth grow first?
__________________
Excellence in reefkeeping is achieved by mastering the fundamentals, and learning from mistakes. |
#17
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you can always cut the foot extention just under the shroom it will grow into a new shroom.
same thing with rics before I had 3 single mouth rics on one rock and now I have at least 15 and I am gonna cut some more.
__________________
265g reef tank tangs:palani,yellow,2blue,kole,purple angels:bicolor,flame,singapore,imperator 2occelaris,1purple dotyback,6chromis,3engineer gobys,2 scooter blenny,1spotted dragonet |
#18
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how do u cut it. i wanna try it
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