Advice Please - Exclusive Clown Fish Tank

Michael B

New member
Hi Reefers,

Would love to set up an exclusive Clown Fish Tank and have a few questions - first what I would like

> Shallow Reef
> Easy & Hardy Corals (that I can have with Anemone?)
> Exclusive Clown Fish Tank (A. Ocellaris only)
> An anemone (after 6 months)

So my questions are as follows (circulation will be closed loop)

> Can I keep 8 to 10 different A. Ocellaris clowns in one tank?
> If so can I have an anemone or two (or does this complicate the issues with having clown fish)
> If so - what is the "best" anemone to look after
> My ideal would be some Snowflakes, Naked Clowns, Midnights, Misbar etc.

So any thoughts, ideas and suggestions are welcome please

Thanks so much
 
The only (semi)safe way to keep multiple clown's would be having them from the same clutch, so that mix won't fare well for you.
I would advise reading two stickies, one, Moberts 27 clowns same tank 27months, and two would be nem FAQ sticky that shows nem/clown natural host matches as well as specific needs for each nem, as they are very different depending on species.
 
Its possible, buts its better if you were to do an anemone and clownfish only tank, preferably bta all over the tank and add all the fish at a very young age and at the same time.
 
The multiple-clowns-per-tank question is a subject of perennial debate on this forum. The general consensus from experienced clownfish keepers is that it doesn't work in the long run.

To give you a real-life illustration, a friend of mine who runs a coral farm also sells locally bred clownfish. She gets them in at a very young age/small size. She still has to separate them after a couple of weeks, because even at barely 1"-1.5" long (and some smaller still), they're already beginning to fight each other for dominance. And these are perculas, which many aquarists consider less aggressive than ocellaris.

For an anemone, I would recommend a BTA. They come in a lot of beautiful morphs and are also available captive-cloned (the best choice). If you're lucky (that is, if the anemone isn't splitting as a survival mechanism, but rather just reproducing itself), yours may eventually split into multiple clones and fill the tank with anemones!
 
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