Adding 2 Supermale Wrasses

RDtrack

New member
Hi

I have the opportunity too add two supermale wrasses to my collection.

One is a lineautus and the other which I'm tempted by is a scotts.

They are both roughly the same size (large and beautiful). I would put then through QT together.

Good idea or bad idea?

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As a general concept, two of different species are typically fine.

However, scottorum is typically pretty aggressive; one to avoid if you want to mix multiple species. And also a species very prone to fading in coloration - they do not keep those saturated colors.
 
As a general concept, two of different species are typically fine.

However, scottorum is typically pretty aggressive; one to avoid if you want to mix multiple species. And also a species very prone to fading in coloration - they do not keep those saturated colors.
Totally agree on the scotts have just never seen one that is this drop dead gorgeous. Personally I normally don't like them.

But I would say both are super males...can't get much larger or more colorful.

These would be the only two wrasses beside a resident Potter that's in my display.

Just worried that they are both in their prime what would they do to each other.

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I agree with evolved - the C. scottorum is pretty aggressive. Better to select a different Cirrhilabrus species IMO. C. exquisitus looks similar to C. scottorum (esp. the Vanuatu variant) without the attitude. :)
 
Thanks for the replies. Went with my gut and got the lineatus. Which is what I wanted I the first place.

Here it is out of the bag.

b650c7fff83e1ec3a171e49f59b961fb.jpg


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That's an exceptional amount of yellow on that guy! Have only seen a few at that end of the spectrum.
 
Thanks. The lineatus was a no doubter, it was more the debate about the scotts which was equally as beautiful.

Personally I haven't seen one this good looking.

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As a general concept, two of different species are typically fine.

However, scottorum is typically pretty aggressive; one to avoid if you want to mix multiple species. And also a species very prone to fading in coloration - they do not keep those saturated colors.



I heard the same thing when I researched wrasses. They looked amazing in the wild though.


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It's still in QT. Doing good though. I'll probably move him over next weekend though.

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