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06/29/2007, 06:42 AM | #1 |
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cleaner wrasse
these adorable little cleaners have my wrapped around their finger. Or should I say fin?
I found this while looking for info on them, knowing they are hard to keep. here's the link http://www.angelfire.com/ab/rayjay/cleaner.html I was planning on keeping in a 10 gallon QT tank, and feeding newly hatched brine (froze and live). Will they clean ocelaris clowns? Percula? Will they fight w/ a neon gobie? Will a neon gobie clean an ocelaris or percula clown? |
06/29/2007, 09:49 AM | #2 |
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hhhhhhheeeeeeeeeeeellllllllllllooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!
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06/29/2007, 09:58 AM | #3 |
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Easy...
There are a variety of ethical issues involved with these fish so you may not get the type of response you want. First. Cleaner wrasse are wild collected from reefs, where they fill a vital ecological niche. Because of this they shouldn't be collected and many try to discourage their purchase. They will clean just about any fish but they tend to not eat in captivity. I have seen several specimens that have taken to frozen mysis but they really need the parasitic crustaceans they get from large reef fish. They also tend to jump out of uncovered tanks All in all I don't think that this is the best fish for your 20gal. You may want to consider a neon cleaner goby instead. They have the same colors, they are captive bred and tend not to jump.
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06/29/2007, 11:29 AM | #4 |
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I hate to tell you, but if you understand that they are difficult to keep, Im not sure why yours would be an exception, especially in such a small tank with such limited food resources. They will pick parasites off of clowns, and most any other fish that will let them, but there wont be enough parasites on a living fish to keep a Cleaner Wrasse alive.
Even if you get lucky and have one feed on offered foods (baby brine, mysis, cyclops, etc), that generally just extends the time it takes them to starve to death. Something is missing from that diet that Im not sure anyone has figured out yet. Without the parasites, they still waste away within 6 months almost every time. Neon cleaner gobies are a really good suggestion. A pair of cleaner shrimp can be interesting to watch too. If you get a much larger tank at some point and want to see cleaning behavior, you can even use certain juvenile angelfish, butterflies, porkfish, other wrasses... its a long list of animals who are well suited to captivity once the parasites run out.
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06/29/2007, 12:11 PM | #5 |
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I just lost mine, he was one of the first fish I got. I'll not get another one even tho he lived for 6 years. When snorkeling in Hawaii, we saw tons and tons of fish. Only 1 pair of cleaner wrasses the whole time we were there.
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06/29/2007, 12:35 PM | #6 | |
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Quote:
FWIW, my cleaner wrasse ate pretty much everything... and wasted away.
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06/29/2007, 12:44 PM | #7 |
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yes but cleaner shrimp live lol!
point taken no wrasse. I have one cleaner shrimp now, and plan not to get another as I have a pep. shrimp and plan to get 1-3 sexy shrimp in the future, as well as a pistol shrimp that will live w/ my future shrimp goby. Too many shrimp. how is caring for a neon goby? They are really pretty. Will they clean any living critter too? Should I get 1 or 2 or 3 or what? |
06/29/2007, 01:02 PM | #8 |
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The only thing i have ever seen my neon goby clean is my clam, actually he was trying to clean out the clam shell completely, eating my beautiful maxima. I moved the clam to another tank and now both are very happy. They are cool fish but im finding out now they only live about 1-2 yrs =-(
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06/30/2007, 01:04 PM | #9 | |
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Re: cleaner wrasse
Quote:
In my case, NONE of my clowns allow any of my cleaner wrasses OR cleaner shrimp to clean them. Don't know why! I ONLY keep cleaner wrasses from Sri Lanka as others DO NOT have a good track record of survival. These Sri Lankan cleaners start off eating frozen food sized appropriate for the size of the mouth of each one where a very young cleaner I have to "grate" the food for. Usually within about 3 months I have them eating any food I place in the tank. I have to use egg crate over tanks with hoods that don't enclose the tank to keep the fish from jumping out. They only try to jump when chased by a fish they have nipped a little too strongly. I have NEVER seen a cleaner wrasse from Hawaii that lived.
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06/30/2007, 01:39 PM | #10 |
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Ummmm... if you look above you will see that I had decided against them. You will also note that the 10 gallon that is too small is a QT tank. Pls read whole thread before getting so worked up next time.
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06/30/2007, 02:12 PM | #11 |
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cleaner wrasses suck in home aquaria and im glad that you decided against them. I would go with only 1 neon goby in your tank because they can bully eachother unless you know they are paired. they are really cool fish and will eat most anything that fits in their mouths. I suggest cyclopeeze as a staple food. my neon was cleaning my lemonpeel angel within the first week it was introduced into the tank. i dont see why a clown would be much different... just depends on the clown's personality really.
It will probably not exceed 2 years in your tank but that is because they have short natural lifespans. I really like these fish because they are very easily bred and many of the ones you see at a lfs are tank bred. |
06/30/2007, 03:03 PM | #12 |
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I have a cleaner wrasse. It was one of the first fish we got and I have had him for about a year and a half now. He eats anyting I put in the tank. Mysis, brine, cyclopeeze (spelling), flake food.. etc. He also cleans all of the fish and my hand everytime I put it in the tank. I have an open top tank and he has never jumped and has survived 3 tank upgrades. He is one of my favorite fish. I guess I got lucky and I am the exception to the rule. I did not know much about them when I got him, the fish store I bought them from said he would do great. luckily he did. I do not go to that store anymore! It is a draw if you do decide to go with one, but people are keeping them and some do take to frozen and flake food. Probably better off left on the reef, but I am glad that I have mine!Just my 2 cents
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06/30/2007, 03:11 PM | #13 |
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how would a lemonpeel angel do in my tank? Could it be the first fish in a 6 week old mixed reef 29 gallons.
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06/30/2007, 03:14 PM | #14 |
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Lemonpeels are notoriously bad in reefs, and get pretty big. I'd pick something else. Gramma? Clown? Blenny? Goby?
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06/30/2007, 07:43 PM | #15 | |
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Quote:
However, the whole point of that post was to reinforce the opinion on tank size as well as state my experiences on the Sri Lanka wrasses etc., as others reading the thread may be tempted to think about getting a wrasse and I think it's important to let them know, and, I don't have that info on my cleaner wrasse page you linked to in your original post. Sorry to have bothered you.
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07/02/2007, 06:50 AM | #16 | |
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Quote:
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-Matt Christian Define Irony: Algae growing on a snail. Current Tank Info: 125 gal planted lagoon |
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07/02/2007, 06:58 AM | #17 | |
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Quote:
Neon gobies are easy to care for. As mentioned keep in mind the short lifespan. Mine currently lives in the refugium, just can't resist the overflow.
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07/04/2007, 06:58 PM | #18 |
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hmmm...
will get another pep shrimp and another skunk cleaner soon then. I love shrimps |
07/04/2007, 06:59 PM | #19 |
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All I can say is that you people better watch yo wrasses.
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07/04/2007, 07:53 PM | #20 |
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wow
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07/04/2007, 08:35 PM | #21 |
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Yeah, I watch two wrasses every day. Mine (CYA) and my wifes.
My cleaner has been going strong for about three years now. |
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