anemone fish compatibility

uponce

New member
I am thinking about purchasing a rose bubble anemone and am wondering if anyone could help me out and advise me if I can actually keep that ype anemone in my tank with incident. I havea fish only tank right now and am trying to expan to soft corals and anemones. I have triggers, eels, wrasses, puffers, lion fish, fox faces and a yellow tang, will these fish eat or nip at the anemone or will they leave it alone? Any advise would help before i drop a few bucks on this.
 
if you want to keep an anemone, turn that 60g fresh water into an anemone species tank... a BTA, 2 clarkiis (mated) and some fiji or tonga LR, and I think you'd have a lovely biotope!
 
I have a porc puffer, golden puffer, spotted puffer, lunar wrasse, golden moray, snowflake eel, goldentail moray and a hawaiin trigger.
 
Sounds like an awfully stressful tank for a pair of clowns and an anemone. Might be better to hold off till you can get somewhere a little quieter for them.
 
Please consider that anemones quite possibly live for hundreds and perhaps even thousands of years. They have no complex organs (hearts, livers, etc) to break down over time, there is no evidence to suggest they live anything less than hundreds of years on the reef.

You have a 200g tank that, imo, is already stuffed with fish. Large predators that are both messy and curious. Even if the puffers decide not to sample the E. Quadricolor, the waste they produce will likely be too much for the anemone which requires excellent water conditions and has much less tolerance than even some of the most sensitive fish.

Your Diodon holacanthus grows to 18" in length, your Arothron meleagris to at least that size. These are huge waste producers.

Anyhow, please consider an anemone only tank, void of predators. Here's a quote from WWM on puffers and inverts:

"Puffers for other than fish-only systems? Oh, they love invertebrates- to eat. Even the smallest species will sample corals, anemones, echinoderms, crustaceans et al. to bedevilment; yes, & they'll even eat smaller unaware fishes"

http://www.wetwebmedia.com/puffers.htm

thanks,

Matt
 
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