I got an email from the garden eel vendor that he'll be getting them in about two weeks. As I was walking past the tank feeling anxious and impatient at the same, something amazing caught my eyes and ended up captivating me for the next half an hour or so.
When I ordered my A. parvulus from LA's DD, I also ordered these two inverts; Venus Anemone Shrimp and Yellow Line Cleaner Shrimp.
As soon as the shrimps were added to the tank, they proceeded to camouflage themselves within the heads of my duncan coral throughout the day. All I could see were their whiskers and I thought to myself, 'Huh. What a waste of money. I can't even see them!"
But as the daylights went out and actinics turned on, I saw my Borbonius actually "parking" himself near the duncan coral begging the shrimps to clean him! And as the wrasse and apogons got closer to see if they could nip at the shrimps, the borbonius would furiously charge after them creating a 6'' radius of his own personal cleaning station space. :lol: He kept going back and forth from one cleaner to another, "trying" them out.
I ran for the camera and I was literally on the floor hiding from the anthias, snapping away at these shots. (He equates my face with food so I had to hide...) The shots are not too clear and I'm still getting used to photographing such small inverts but man... it was just so cool to witness it. I've seen skunk cleaners do it few times but only to bigger fish.
I took a lot of pics but these are the only decent ones.
Clean me!
Again!