How to Frag Green Star Polyps (GSP)

How to Frag Green Star Polyps (GSP)

Difficulty Very easy
Time Required 10 minutes
Healing Time About 1 week
Best Method Cut and peel a strip of mat
Coral Type Encrusting soft coral (purple mat)

Overview

GSP grows as a purple rubber mat that carpets anything in its path, which makes fragging trivially easy: cut the mat, peel a strip, glue it down. The real skill with GSP is containment — most reefers eventually frag it to stop it. Grown on an isolated island rock or the back wall it is spectacular; loose in your rockwork it is a green lawn you will be mowing forever.

What You’ll Need

  • Scalpel or sharp scissors
  • Frag plugs, discs or an isolated rock
  • Gel super glue

Step-by-Step

  1. Find a mat edge (or lift one by sliding the scalpel underneath) and cut a strip roughly an inch long.
  2. Peel the strip off the rock — the purple mat comes away cleanly like sticker vinyl.
  3. Dab the underside dry and glue it flat to the plug. Edges down; it re-adheres fast.
  4. Return both to moderate light and flow. Done — this is the whole job.

Aftercare & Healing

Polyps reopen within a day or two, and the mat edge starts creeping within a week — GSP can double in months. Trim the parent’s advancing edge whenever it approaches something you care about; those trimmings are free frags for the swap box.

What Can Go Wrong

Polyps closed for days: GSP sulks after handling but almost always reopens; check for algae smothering the mat. It is taking over the tank: the classic GSP problem — keep it on an island, and peel invading mat off rocks completely (any purple left behind regrows).

Related Care Guides

Green Star Polyps