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#1
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Clowntrigger with corals?
I wonder if there is anyone who has a BIG clowntrigger together with corals? I had a small clown once and he diden't touch the inverbrates. Is there a different behaviour when they growing bigger?
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#2
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it will eat coral peroid. i wouldnt try it
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#3
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Triggers change drastically from juvie to adult. A large CT is just about guarenteed to kill corals. I have 6" Queens and a 4" Clown that would LOVE to have some corals for dinner . The other triggs are too small and they haven't changed yet (the blue line is the same size as the Clown but he is not very smart bout life!) but they will. Expect the unexpected and Don't Trust a Trigger, are great ideas to use when thinking about purchasing one of these majestic beauties. Hope this helps.
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55g- Baby Black Volitan, Fu Manchu Lion, Marine Betta, and juvenile Pink Face Wrasse. All inhabitants will be moved to the 209g when it gets re set up after I graduate college in December. |
#4
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Additionally, these guys get MUCH larger than the average aquariust can imagine when looking at cute little juveniles.
While an adult is very capable (and quite likely) to much a coral head for a snack, especially large polyped varieties), the amount of waste generated would also preclude them in all but huge systems.
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"Nothing is carved in stone, and even if it were, the sea removes stones wave by wave" |
#5
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I'm goin to cut a small branch from my large Frogspawn, and put it in the tank with my Clown trigger to see if he will eat it ,so far he have no interest,to mushrooms, Ricordia,or cleaner shrimp.
he like to eat snails and hermit crabs. you can see the shroom in the back of the picture. I will let you know.
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Steve . |
#6
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My old CT would bite everything in the tank - rock, cords, anything. Off course you never know, you might find something he just doesn't feel like chomping on.
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"Failing to plan is planning to fail." DIVE SAFE |
#7
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Quote:
But he don't bite anything in the tank.
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Steve . |
#8
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Zoom, as they get bigger many triggers begin to "hunt" in the tank, that is go through the LR, piece by piece, sieze it with their jaws and trow it aside, then move on to the next piece.
In the wild, this is how they find crabs, shrimp, snails and urchins, all part of their normal diet. We have an adult Dragon Wrasse, a much smaller fish, and you would be amazed at how much LR and the size of the pieces it moves daily in its hunting, even though it's VERY well fed. Even if not eaten, being tossed in a heap is not beneficial to most corals, and if it's cemented in place.....no problem. One quick bite and twist and the coral branch is broken off, THEN discarded. You have quite an adventure, not to mention more than a little frustration ahead!**grin**
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"Nothing is carved in stone, and even if it were, the sea removes stones wave by wave" |
#9
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thank you all for the advise. I will have a seperate tank for him to destroy and feed him with cats and dogs
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#10
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Swedish viking, that's not as remote as you think.....we have a medium sized dog-faced puffer whose favorite food actually is the moist catfood chunks (once the gravy has been licked off by the cats!).
While it's extremely hard to visualize, these really do grow larger than an American football, and with jaws and dentition that can actually be dangerous. Even though we wish our little pets would be what we want them to be forever, it just isn't real........one of my morays left me with quite a scar as proof of that.
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"Nothing is carved in stone, and even if it were, the sea removes stones wave by wave" |
#11
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I Just love this fish! It's the most interesting fish of them all.
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#12
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The bad part is that I fully understand your point, and there are so many fish that fit into this category that, unfortunately just don't make good friends for most other fish.
We have a pair of Banded Bamboo Sharks that are actually as close to affectionate with each other as two fish can get (I imagine puberty will change all that! **grin**), but when they mature they'll probably need the big tank pretty well to themselves.
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"Nothing is carved in stone, and even if it were, the sea removes stones wave by wave" |
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