You can leave it as it is and let the plantlets develop after the flowers drop. Once the plantlets reach a decent size and have a few roots, you can clip it off the stalk and plant it on its own in the gravel.
hi guys,
hope i didnt get the name wrong. some time i ago i bought an E.oriental from a bro here and now its doing well. attached are the pictures of it blooming. there is this "antenna" that grows out of water and blooms. How do i propagate them? It could be seen at some buds, there are leaves growing out. do i just plant that portion? Or does it propagate at its own? Initially there was only 1 "antenna" now i have 3 of them.
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You can leave it as it is and let the plantlets develop after the flowers drop. Once the plantlets reach a decent size and have a few roots, you can clip it off the stalk and plant it on its own in the gravel.
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be kind! =)
I got a big one growing emersed in my garden. Recently clipped a small plantlet to put in my tank too.
...people ask why I eat fish even though i'm such an avid fish keeper... Bottom line is that I've been eating fish a lot longer than I've been keeping them...
Wait for the little root to shoot out from the bud. Cut in between. Laid them on aquarium floor (substrate), it will root in and grow. I tried that. GoodCos the plant get to "drink" from water column first then slowly creep into the substrate and gain position.
colin | The Wilderness and Forest | FTS
thanks for the many suggestions! but i find the plant too big already. will plant it in my pond =)
Allow young leaves to form before dunking them into the water to encourage root growth, however not always a must, it can also be done once the 'youngling' have grown to a considerable size, snip it off and allow it to float on the surface.
Echinorous do grow fairly huge under direct sunlight. so in a pond, with sufficient room to spread its root, you will get larger Echinodorus than those in a tank (maybe with the exception of a 5 to 6 footer)
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