Mustafa wrote: ↑Tue Oct 02, 2018 12:52 pm
Arquisto wrote: ↑Sat Sep 29, 2018 9:51 pm
I remember you posting that! Wonder what happened. I'd love to order some from Mustafa if he's managed to get it going. I'm sure he's just making sure it's long-term tested.
The difficulty in selling this plant is that it needs to sent attached to a rock as the *only* part that grows and reproduces is the very bottom of the part that is attached to a surface. You can't just pluck the plant off of a rock and send it...it will hang in there for a short while and then die without reproducing. The other option would be to send the part of the plant that produces spores and then hope for the best...but that's not sustainable as an option. Finally, since the plant is so fragile, it's difficult to ship...especially with a rock attached to it. The rock may roll all over the plant during transport by USPS and the customer may receive a bunch of fragments instead of a whole plant.
As far as transport goes, this is just an idea: In Jason’s original post, he mentioned “... it has already popped up in my new tank despite neither tank having ever shared any of the objects that are in either one of them. My guess is that I inadvertently transferred it over when netting the shrimp out of the older tank and into the newer. It could very well have been in the water on the net...”
SoOo, rather than selling the plant attached to a rock, would a small bag of water full of the spores aka “flowers” be possible? Then it can self seed in it’s new home and grow.
Can this possibility be layered on to the experimenting?
It may be a stretch- whether it’s even possible, if it does- averages of plants produced per water volume, whether spores can survive in a bag for a few days while being transported, etc...
But if it could work, that would be an amazing little plant to have
