The stem is a 2-way street. Roots send water/nutrients up, and the top sends a keiki inhibiting hormone down. When plant gets tall enough, the hormone no longer reaches the base of the stem, and then keikis start to form.
In this case, try to keep it together till roots above the break are well established. Then cut the top off and plant separately.
Whether base will give you a keiki is unknown. Depends in part on how much hormone is getting through now, in part on whether lower part of stem has any leaves, and in part on who knows what. In a vacuum, in this case it is probably 50/50 whether base will produce new growth.
|