Thanks for your help. I will likely draft plans for the tank later today, I will post them and I'd love some feedback.
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I did a lot of kayaking in the brackish area along the Atlantic coast when I was last in Florida & brought home some red mangrove props that I found washed ashore on concrete pads that probably wouldn’t have lived.
I put them in a bucket, changed the water daily while still in FL, wrapped them in wet paper & put them in a cooler, drove 1.5 days home, and just put them in a 10g nano I’ve got without acclimating them.
75% of them survived and are thriving, surprisingly. Just under an AI Hydra 52HD (running maybe 25%), in maybe 1.5” of Fiji pink sand, standard reef salinity, (very occasionally) spray RODI on them, and that’s it. They’re hardier than I expected. They’ve grown quite a bit in just the last 7-8 months.
So, don’t worry too much.
Thanks for the kind words.
I started them all from pods in that tank. To encourage prop root growth, I first put in pvc pipes as stakes and tied them lightly to the pipes to keep them suspended.
If I had it to do again, I would just stick them straight into the sand. I’ve read that they’ll grow faster and stronger that way. They’ll grow prop roots on their own later.
I think that they’ll grow out of the water, even if they’re initially submerged. I had a bunch of orange mangroves too (only 1 left) that I started submerged and they grew out.
Deeper sand bed (or a pot of something) may be better so that they’ll be better able to support themselves later.
Here is a link to my small mangrove build .
I have learned a lot along the way .
Funny, I was actually looking at your build earlier. How old was your plant from the first picture in the bucket? Also, updates would be great. Id love to see what it looks like now.
(picture cred @ewelch )
Here is a link to my small mangrove build .
I have learned a lot along the way .
https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/micro-mangrove-build.331951/
This reminds me I haven’t done an update in awhile
At the time the picture was taken in the bucket it was about 2 years old if I remember correctly . I got it as a small shoot with two leaves . Grew it out in soil and fresh water until it reached the size I was looking for .
Over a couple of months I transitioned out of the soil to water only . Then slowy raised the salinity until I got to where I wanted .
Once they get some size on them they are pretty bullet proof . To me, pods are hit or miss . I guess it’s their size and also a lot of the pods I see for sale look like they have been put through the ringer
Just a quick shot of where it is today, sorry for the crappy phone picture
Wow, that thing is a big body. Sorry to bombard you with questions, what about the roots? Obviously, the "branches" leaving the central stalk balance the plant, but when the "branches" go into the sand, do they turn into roots? (I'm assuming yes). And in a tank that size, is the sand bed almost all roots?
I have been playing with Mangroves for around 6 years at this point . It took a lot of trial and error plus patience to get the shape I was looking for . Basically with it planted in soil, once a root system was developed I began to slowly raise the plant out of the soil . I believe this is what caused the prop roots(mainly the one big one) to develop.
Suprisingly the sand bed is still realitvly free of roots . Once I acclimated the plant to SW growth has be drastically reduced . Which I guess is a good thing for those delicate silicon seams .
I have been trimming the canopy in order to promote more outward growth instead of vertical . I am still learning where and how to prune to achomplish this . I have also been keeping most of the roots at bay with my trusty pair of siccors .
Faster growth in freshwater is interesting. My pods are growing in my fuge of my 90g reef, so the water is standard reef conditions. I wonder if the tank I construct should be on the fresh side to encourage growth, then I can manipulate salinity as needed. My only fear is that transferring the rooting pods from full salt to mostly fresh would shock them.
With the smaller ones it’s always a risk but the transition can be done . Just make sure your pods are healthy and to make the changes VERY slowly .