Orion is the source on this. He breeds clownfish and is the go to source for clowns and anemones here.This is interesting. I'd like to read more. Can you provide the source of this information?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Orion is the source on this. He breeds clownfish and is the go to source for clowns and anemones here.This is interesting. I'd like to read more. Can you provide the source of this information?
Dom,This is interesting. I'd like to read more. Can you provide the source of this information?
Fish are not people. They don't really think. They don't try and/or give up trying. They don't try to get along and give up trying once they find out they can't.
As they mature, they will instinctively try to dominate and fight. The looser have behavior signals for submissiveness when he know that he lost to her. The case here is what when the looser put up the white flag, the winner does not recognized it as such so there is no truce and the fight goes on in the winner's mind. Therefore she keep on beating him up.
These are animal's instinctive behavior not rational thought process like human.
Orion is the source on this. He breeds clownfish and is the go to source for clowns and anemones here.
I wish I could have two tanks. Wife is on the edge with just the one, and the QT set-up in the guest bedroom now is basically a ticking time bomb...Joking? Why? If this were my home I'd have two tanks. J/K I had to merge tanks to lower the number I had active to a more manageable state and had to rehome my pink skunk. I gave him to a school tank in the area. It was the pink skunk or the GSM and my wife loves the GSM.
:rolleyes:I am just trying to vet information. You have to be careful; many people post opinion as fact.
....
You may want to try the placing both in the QT and placing a divider in it. This would allow them to see each other but not hurt each other. After a while, they may become trained to think that they see each other but can't get to each other. Leave it this way for a few months and then pull the divider from the tank to see how the respond.
:rolleyes:
Dom,
So you have published information on your advises (the ones I quoted above)or is it something that you think is logical to do?
I tried my hand at breeding Ocellaris, Percula, Crossbreed between the two, especially SnowOnyx which is a cross between Snowflake Ocellaris, and Onyx Percula. What I wrote was per my observation trying to pair same species and cross species multiple times.
Also a lot of the observation come from having clownfish come out of my ears, I tried to raise the very best clownfish in my main 420 DT, and sump and refugiums. The things is having a bunch of various clowns species and mutts clowns of various and crosses, they always (almost 100%) end up pair with almost a copy of them self if they have a choice of a bunch of potential (which is what happen when I put a bunch of them in my DT, about 12-16 in my 420 gal DT). I don't think they are racists. They ended up pairing because they have, in general, the same, signals.
I always have problems with pairing cross species. They beat the tar our of each other before they end up pairing. Same species pairing is a breeze with Ocellais and Percula.
NP, just pointing out that he is an expert on the subject.I am just trying to vet information. You have to be careful; many people post opinion as fact.
Got it. Basically pins itself into a rock on the bottom and doesn’t fight back at all. Seems like a separation.I have to separate them and try other pair when I think the life of one is in danger. I now this when I see one so beat up that he just hide away and not even trying to show submissive.
How he behave not how torn up his fins are.
Thank you for sharing this. I am have been looking at designer Ocellaris pairs to buy. Could you share some behaviors to watch for in a pair that is probably a good bonded pair? Some gorgeous LFS pairs I have observed are offered for sale as “bonded pairs” . But several of these pairs seem to squabble or not swim together much. Any tips on selecting a good pair that is likely to stay bonded?:rolleyes:
Dom,
So you have published information on your advises (the ones I quoted above)or is it something that you think is logical to do?
I tried my hand at breeding Ocellaris, Percula, Crossbreed between the two, especially SnowOnyx which is a cross between Snowflake Ocellaris, and Onyx Percula. What I wrote was per my observation trying to pair same species and cross species multiple times.
Also a lot of the observation come from having clownfish come out of my ears, I tried to raise the very best clownfish in my main 420 DT, and sump and refugiums. The things is having a bunch of various clowns species and mutts clowns of various and crosses, they always (almost 100%) end up pair with almost a copy of them self if they have a choice of a bunch of potential (which is what happen when I put a bunch of them in my DT, about 12-16 in my 420 gal DT). I don't think they are racists. They ended up pairing because they have, in general, the same, signals.
I always have problems with pairing cross species. They beat the tar our of each other before they end up pairing. Same species pairing is a breeze with Ocellais and Percula.