Monday, May 4, 2015
SAVAGE SOHAL!
THE LEAF SCORPIONFISH - KING OF CRYPSIS
A beautiful pink leaf scorpionfish interacts with a light colored
individual off Ambon, Indonesia. The pink fish, which I would suggest
is a male, flops from side-to-side in front of what may be a female
individual.
CAUGHT-UP IN A WASPFISH STIING!
The longfin waspfish is spectacular species that is not easy to keep
in the home aquarium. At night it emerges from the sand and cruises just
over the bottom hunting.
Bristletooth Filefish - Anemone Terminator!
The glass anemone destroyer - the bristle-tail filefish (Acreichthys tomentosus)
HARLEQUIN SHRIMPS: Beautiful but Barbarous!
"Oh what pretty tube-feet you have!" A pair of harlequin shrimp on a
rubble patch off the coast of Sulawesi are having a Linkia seastar for
dinner.
TRIGGERS IN THE REEF TANK
The redtooth or niger triggerfish (Odonus niger) is a handsome
fish that can be kept in a reef aquarium. Of all the potentially
reef-safe triggerfishes, this is one with a more dubious reputation. It
will eat ornamental crustaceans and as it grows larger, it may attack
and even kill fish tankmates.
Triggerfishes have long had a bad reputation for being voracious predators and aquarium bullies. Many of the triggers are some of the most polyphagous of all fishes, eating everything from algae, sponges and corals, to all kinds of crustaceans and even smaller fishes. So the idea of adding one of these beasts to a reef aquarium, packed with succulent invertebrates, seems a bit daft! While it is true, the majority of triggerfishes are not appropriate invertebrate aquarium neighbors, there is a relatively small group of triggers that have more specialized diets that can be housed with sessile invertebrates.
In this post we will examine these triggerfishes and look at the calculated risk of keeping some of the less suitable species with your invertebrates.
RIBBON EEL RAPTURE
A male ribbon eel with the characteristic flared nostrils and barbel-like filaments on the lower jaw.
A TASTE FOR CREOLE!
The large terminal phase Creole wrasse is a sight to behold!
CLEANER SHRIMP BEHAVIOR AND HUSBANDRY
Skunk cleaner shrimp inspects the mouth of a complying anthias. Photo by Scott W.
Michael.
STRESSED OUT!
The key to keeping your marine fishes healthy, like this Limbaugh's angelfish (Holacanthus limbaughi), is to keep stress at a minimum. Photo by Scott W. Michael
AN ODD-COUPLE
A pair of yellow shrimpgobies (Cryptocentrus cinctus) and
an undescribed species of snapping shrimp on a sandy slope in the Raja
Ampats. The gobies keep watch as the shrimp performs its maintenance
duties.
We at Reef Tectonics love shrimpgobies and their snapping shrimp partners and would love to set-up this fantastic symbiotic relationship in your aquarium!
© Scott W. Michael - Reef Tectonics
Reef Tectonics Aquarium Maintenance and Design - Lincoln, Omaha, Des Moines, Kansas City
BROWN BLOTCH SNAIL (BABYLONIA SPP.)
There are a number of snails that are employed to help turn the upper layers of the sand bed and to scavenge on food items that come to rest on the aquarium bottom. Most of these are small, relatively bland-looking snails. For example, the members of the genus Nassarius are probably the most often utilized in this role. There common name, mud snails, attests not only to their habitat preferences but also their not so sexy appearance! But there is a genus of gastropods that is not only effective at clean-up duties, but also are very attractive. These are the snails in the genus Babylonia (family Babyloniidae), two or more of which show-up in the aquarium trade on occasion (including Babylonia zeylanica and B. formosae). These snails sport butterscotch colored blotches on a white to yellowish-cream background. They reach an appreciable size for a snail (around 2.5 inches) and are harvested for human consumption in some parts of Asia.
GOIN TUBING! Keeping Tube Worms (Families Sabellidae and Serpulidae)
The beautiful Coco Worm (Protula magnifica) is a difficult animal to keep long-term.
WHY DO FISH JUMP OUT OF OUR AQUARIUMS?
Notorious jumper - the longnosed hawkfish.
FLATWORM WORRIES
Acoel flatworms can reach plague proportions in the home aquarium. The photos shows Waminoa flatworms on a bubble coral.
DEEP WATER DELIGHT!
Cephalopholis igarashiensis (a.k.a., the garish hind) is an amazing grouper that is poorly known to aquarists and scientists alike because of its proclivity for deep reef habitats - it occurs at depths in excess of 250 feet and is most often found in excess of 400 feet. As a result, it is not likely to show-up in your local aquarium store anytime soon. This individual was selling for $ 6,000 at House of Fins in Greenwich Connecticut (sorry, this photo was taken a couple of years ago and the fish has since been sold). Virtually nothing is known about its biology. It has been reported from southern Japan, Taiwan, Guam, the south China Sea, American Samoa, Tahiti and Fiji. It reaches a maximum length of around 17 inches.
© Scott W. Michael- Reef Tectonics
Reef Tectonics Aquarium Maintenance and Design - Lincoln, Omaha, Des Moines, Kansas City
TANK RAGE!
Reef fishes, like this dwarf
hawkfish, comes into the tank with behavioral baggage that can cause
problems in a captive fish community. Photo by Scott W. Michael.
LPS EYE-CANDY!
How is this for a collection of amazing large-polyped stony corals! The shot includes amazing corals in the genera Scolymia, Cynarina and Balonophyllia.
While expensive, all of these amazing corals are fairly easy to keep if
given enough light, some food and appropriate habitat (in the case of Scolymia and Cynarina a soft substrate to rest upon). This buffet of calcareous beauties was photographed at the amazing HOUSE OF FINS (owned by my friend Rob Bray) in Greenwich, CT.
Photo copyright © Scott W. Michael- Reef Tectonics
Reef Tectonics Aquarium Maintenance and Design - Lincoln, Omaha, Des Moines, Kansas City
Photo copyright © Scott W. Michael- Reef Tectonics
Reef Tectonics Aquarium Maintenance and Design - Lincoln, Omaha, Des Moines, Kansas City
"OH, WHAT BLUE TEETH YOU HAVE!"
A gorgeous Australian harlequin tuskfish. This species is displaying towards a tankmate.
Reef Tectonic's clients love the harlequin tusk (Choerodon fasciatus)! And why wouldn’t they? They are indeed one of the most beautiful fish inhabiting the reefs of the western Pacific. The tuskfishes are members of the wrasse family Labridae and is the only member of the genus Choerodon that is found in the aquarium trade with any regularity.Let's take a closer look at the biology and husbandry requirements of this fish.
WELCOME!
Welcome to the Reef Tectonics Blog! We hope that this blog will
enable us to communicate with our valued clients as well as anyone that
loves aquatic organisms and aquariums! We welcome your feedback on the
subject matter discussed on the blog and suggestions on future
contributions. You can also visit our website (www.reeftectonics.com) and our facebook page! Happy fish-keeping!
Reef Tectonics Aquarium Maintenance and Design - Lincoln, Omaha, Des Moines, Kansas City
Reef Tectonics Aquarium Maintenance and Design - Lincoln, Omaha, Des Moines, Kansas City
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