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  #1  
Old 12/13/2007, 08:51 AM
kathainbowen kathainbowen is offline
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Blackfoot lionfish captive care?

A few years back, I fell in love with those little beauties, the blackfoot lionfish (Parapterois heterura). And who wouldn't when faced with one of those guys? Unfortunately, the two that I ordered separately never fared well with two separate incidents of bad shapping and both perished in QT at the store. At the time when I ordered them, there was NO information about them (aside from species and pics- they were even going by the strange name of "Bluefin Dwarf Fuzzy Lionfish" in some circles), and I just couldn't find it in me to potentially keep killing the little guys since it seemed no one had the answers on them (or even knew whether or not they could be kept!).

Now that I'm seeing them kept slightly more often and certainly with far better results that my poor two, the bug has bitten me again. But I'm hobbyist enough to know the extent of my care knowledge and admit.... I'm bedeviled. All the info I see is rather conflicting. Some people say coldwater, others are insisting reef conditions. *exasperation*




Anyone out there on RC have any experience with the blackfoot that they could share? I'd be very grateful to hear your stories.
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  #2  
Old 12/13/2007, 10:15 AM
LisaD LisaD is offline
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I don't know of anyone that's kept them with long term success (I tried three, including a cool tank) and all died within days or weeks.

They are beautiful fish. I'd like to know if there are successful keepers, and what is the secret to success. But so far, I only know of one hobbiest claiming long term survival of this fish. I've never even seen them in public aquaria.

I am also interested in others' experiences.
  #3  
Old 12/13/2007, 11:24 AM
kathainbowen kathainbowen is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by LisaD
I don't know of anyone that's kept them with long term success (I tried three, including a cool tank) and all died within days or weeks.

They are beautiful fish. I'd like to know if there are successful keepers, and what is the secret to success. But so far, I only know of one hobbiest claiming long term survival of this fish. I've never even seen them in public aquaria.

I am also interested in others' experiences.


Well, welcome and thanks for your info. Mine all died within a week of shipping, despite feeding well. Both my manager and I suspected poor shipping (several things dropped off from both orders) or copper (they were in a system we had been copper treated on the occasion, but several other lionfish species had been in the system after that and thrived. The theory we surmised from it was that blackfoot lionfish couldn't handle copper, while new information suggests otherwise).

Hopefully other people will start coming out to share their own experiences.
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  #4  
Old 12/13/2007, 06:57 PM
FMarini FMarini is offline
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about 1 or 2 yrs back a few shipment came in from the phillipines w/ alot of bluefin lions (never heard of them called blakcfoot), pretty much everyone on this board that purchased them watched them perish. A few LFS here got them in as well, same results.

Only one report i am aware of w/ any success, and by success I mean longer than 6 months.
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  #5  
Old 12/14/2007, 04:56 PM
justlopin justlopin is offline
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Can someone post a picture so I know which lion this is about please....
  #6  
Old 12/14/2007, 09:31 PM
kathainbowen kathainbowen is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by justlopin
Can someone post a picture so I know which lion this is about please....
Google is a wonderful thing.


From Saltwaterfish.com (blackfoot lionfish)

The animal we're looking at is generally seen as a rather diminutive specimen of the lionfish family, not commonly seen by divers or in the retail trade, usually seen at a range of 2-4" (although, there are many who insist this animal gets to be 8" long). They have a strange behavioral pattern, more nocturnal in nature and preferring to remain partially buried in a fine sand or muck bed during the day before coming out to feed on small fish, shrimp, or other invertebrates at dusk and night. While both the species of the Parapterois genus are found in the Indian Ocean, P. heterura (the blackfoot lionfish) is found as far as the African coastlines to Japan and Indonesia.

The blackfoot lionfish isn't commonly seen in aquarium trade and seem to be really a "specialist's pet." This is due to various factors. They are no where near as hardy nor as popular as the volitan's lionfish or other dwarf lionfish varieties (like the zebra or the dwarf fuzzy). In addition to that, due to their daytime behavior, they are difficult to view in the wild, let alone collect. In truth, most lions of this genus are seen from commercial fishing trawls, dredging them up from their daytime hiding spot. All things considered, it all adds up to an animal rarely seen and seeming rarely kept in hobbyist tanks with much success.

My two perished within a week of arrival on two separate orders. Conditions *seemed* optimal at the time, and both *seemed* to be recovering after poor shipping. They were eating well and showing nice fully (but not overly plump) stomachs. They would go from being perfectly fine the night before to absolutely dead the next day. Were it not for the fact that the company we ordered from had (and still has) a high reputation for dealing only with fish guaranteed not from cyanide capture, I would have suspected that. The only thing we could figure at the time was possibly copper (it was a QT and treatment tank from time to time, so it's highly possibly that some trace copper lingered on).





*still hoping someone will turn up with more info on successful captive care*
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  #7  
Old 12/15/2007, 04:52 PM
LisaD LisaD is offline
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As FMarini said, many of us purchased them and they pretty much all quickly perished. In my case, I kept them in tanks that had never been treated with copper. The lions I bought were from different shipments. Like yours, they fed well, but died quickly.

Until I know the secret of sourcing healthy specimens and providing them with conditions they need for long term survival, I won't be buying this gorgeous fish again. If they lived in captivity, I think they would be THE most popular lionfish. Moderate size, dramatic coloration, cool behaviors. This one's a heartbreaker.
  #8  
Old 12/15/2007, 05:45 PM
kathainbowen kathainbowen is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by LisaD
Until I know the secret of sourcing healthy specimens and providing them with conditions they need for long term survival, I won't be buying this gorgeous fish again. If they lived in captivity, I think they would be THE most popular lionfish. Moderate size, dramatic coloration, cool behaviors. This one's a heartbreaker.
That's actually precisely why I stopped ordering them after the first two specimens (from two different shipments like yours), both died. It just didn't feel right to keep doing that to the little guys when there wasn't any information out there to point to a logical solution to whatever problems they were having in our tanks. Like I said, there didn't even seem to be any concensus on a common name at the time, nor any really concrete information about their care.

It seems like that's the still the case now, and, like you said, it is truly a real heartbreaker.
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  #9  
Old 12/15/2007, 08:33 PM
FMarini FMarini is offline
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Guys (gals actually)-
i believe the biggest issues w/ this fish is the fact that its a temperature water fish that is collected and handled like a tropical fish, then by the time it reaches our aquariums its already on the death clock. Think catalina goby of lionfish.

Just placing a catalina goby in a cool water tank does not guarentee its survival, it merely prolongs its death. I suspect it must have something to do w/ higher O2 levels of coldwater, but I just don't know. There were 2 posters a yr or so back that were able to keep their bluefin lions for longer than 6 months, one of them claimed he recieved the fish from a private collector who kept it in temperate conditions the whole time.

I had a chance to speak to scott micheal about these fish awhile back, he was telling me he's seen them as far south as the phillipines (they are usually found in japanese waters-cold), but from deep waters. They are a substrate attached fish that digs a pit and protects it and uses the pit as a ambush spot, so again the bottom part of the water column where the coolest waters are.

The only way i would try this fish is if it were collected by a knowlegible collection company who stored this fish in temperate water during collection/shipping and at my LFS.

Lastly, in regards to more info about these fish, last yr one of the issue of KORAL magazine was dedicated to lionfish, and it had an article about bluefins. I don't recall much husbandry info, but it was interesting none the less. Honestly i've not even seen this fish at any public aquarium who has the ability to get temperate water fish, and be successful w/ them
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  #10  
Old 12/15/2007, 08:53 PM
Ranzan Ranzan is offline
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awesome looking lion to bad they are handeled like that
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  #11  
Old 12/16/2007, 09:56 AM
kathainbowen kathainbowen is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by FMarini
Guys (gals actually)-
i believe the biggest issues w/ this fish is the fact that its a temperature water fish that is collected and handled like a tropical fish, then by the time it reaches our aquariums its already on the death clock. Think catalina goby of lionfish.

Just placing a catalina goby in a cool water tank does not guarentee its survival, it merely prolongs its death. I suspect it must have something to do w/ higher O2 levels of coldwater, but I just don't know. There were 2 posters a yr or so back that were able to keep their bluefin lions for longer than 6 months, one of them claimed he recieved the fish from a private collector who kept it in temperate conditions the whole time.
See, the 02 content of the water was something I hadn't considered, as blackfoot lionfish kept in among a wide temperature range have been noted to perish as well (from reef heat to coldwater chill, and everything in between), making whatever the critical issue seem really not entirely related to just the temperature.
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  #12  
Old 12/16/2007, 12:46 PM
FMarini FMarini is offline
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Kat--
I will repeat this, because I feel this is the missing key w/ this fish. IMHO-the temp of the water the bluefins are kept in all thru its collection/handling and shipping must be kept temperate (cold). Remember that it takes anywhere from 5days to 2 weeks before a fish leaves the ocean and gets to your door, thats alot of time to be kept like a tropical fish. Esp since most collection sites are designed to house tropical fish- not temperateone, so they just place all fish in warm water.

IMHO, the outcome and survival of this fish has little to do w/ what temp YOUR fish tank is, the time clock of death has already been set in motion due to the inappropiate handling of the fish back in the phillipines or from japanese waters. I agree And yes according to where the fish are found they "appear" to have a wide distribution of ater temps, but again even in the more southerly collection areas, the fish is found on the bottom where the water is the coldest.

Anyway, I am still trying to figure out why a cold waterfish would not do well in wamr water, and the difference between cold vs warm water is the amt of O2 saturation-cold water holds more O2,
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  #13  
Old 12/16/2007, 12:54 PM
LisaD LisaD is offline
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Frank, are you certain the explanation for their poor survival is simply the water temperature from collecting on to LFS?

To extend the analogy with Catalina gobies, then - how do Catalina gobies do if people put them in a temperate tank? (I have never kept them.) I've never heard that they won't make it because of how they've been held prior to purchase. I've seen Catalina gobies in LFS, being held with other tropicals, and looking okay. I understand they will not survive long term if they aren't kept in temperate conditions. However, are they also going to definitely perish (like blue fins) if purchased in apparent good health, then put into a cool tank?

Quote:
Anyway, I am still trying to figure out why a cold waterfish would not do well in wamr water, and the difference between cold vs warm water is the amt of O2 saturation-cold water holds more O2,
I suppose there could be numerous adaptations to cold temperatures that would make it difficult to survive in warmer waters. I don't think it would *have* to be dissolved oxygen.
  #14  
Old 12/16/2007, 01:59 PM
kathainbowen kathainbowen is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by FMarini
Kat--
I will repeat this, because I feel this is the missing key w/ this fish. IMHO-the temp of the water the bluefins are kept in all thru its collection/handling and shipping must be kept temperate (cold). Remember that it takes anywhere from 5days to 2 weeks before a fish leaves the ocean and gets to your door, thats alot of time to be kept like a tropical fish. Esp since most collection sites are designed to house tropical fish- not temperateone, so they just place all fish in warm water.

IMHO, the outcome and survival of this fish has little to do w/ what temp YOUR fish tank is, the time clock of death has already been set in motion due to the inappropiate handling of the fish back in the phillipines or from japanese waters. I agree And yes according to where the fish are found they "appear" to have a wide distribution of ater temps, but again even in the more southerly collection areas, the fish is found on the bottom where the water is the coldest.
Ah, I think I misunderstood you at first. I definitely hadn't thought of their collection and handling (out of sight, out of mind), especially considering, like I said, that the success rate has been pretty dismal for both coldwater and warm tanks.
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  #15  
Old 12/16/2007, 10:21 PM
FMarini FMarini is offline
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Lisa-
Nope i do not know why these fish are comming in so poorly. S michaels had mentioned to me that these fish are easy to catch, so i doubt its a cyanide issue. Honestly the fish are temperate water , and I know the collection/holding facilities all use pumped in seawater so its warmer. But it makes no sense why NO body including public aquarium are having any success w/ this fish
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  #16  
Old 12/17/2007, 05:50 AM
kathainbowen kathainbowen is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by FMarini
But it makes no sense why NO body including public aquarium are having any success w/ this fish
Out of curiosity, have many public aquariums tried to keep blackfoots, to your knowledge?
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