Anemone for bicinctus clownfish?

RandyReefer

New member
I just got a pair of the new Ora spotcinctus clownfish. I would like to get an anemone for them, they are in a 22 gallon. Which anemone will they like the most?
 
Their natural hosts are aurora, crispa, gigantea, magnifica, and quadricolor. In a 22 gallon, I would stick with quadricolor.
 
i agree with EC. plus it will keep them from getting a real dark brown color and keep their nicer yellows on them. this is what i did for my Tricinctus.
 
Their natural hosts are aurora, crispa, gigantea, magnifica, and quadricolor. In a 22 gallon, I would stick with quadricolor.
Although these are the traditional natural host anemone species listed for A. bicinctus I have seen dive videos of them being obviously hosted by S. haddoni and what strongly appeared to be M. doreensis. Just food for thought.
 
Although these are the traditional natural host anemone species listed for A. bicinctus I have seen dive videos of them being obviously hosted by S. haddoni and what strongly appeared to be M. doreensis. Just food for thought.


i wouldnt put a Haddoni or a LTA in a 22g tank like the OP has.
 
Although these are the traditional natural host anemone species listed for A. bicinctus I have seen dive videos of them being obviously hosted by S. haddoni and what strongly appeared to be M. doreensis. Just food for thought.

Are the videos on youtube? I'd love to see them if you can remember how to access them.
 
Alright found the original video. Lots of shots of what appear to be M. doreensis hosting bicinctus and the S. haddoni appears at about 1:48. Also another great S. haddoni part at about 10:13.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQHxEi-gOT8&feature=related

The only anemones I haven't seen A. bicinctus in is C. adhesivum and H. malu but it wouldn't surprise me if they were found in them. They seem to very non-host specific.
 
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I've already put a rbta in there that I had in another tank, they hosted it in less than a day and are already feeding it :)
 
Alright found the original video. Lots of shots of what appear to be M. doreensis hosting bicinctus and the S. haddoni appears at about 1:48. Also another great S. haddoni part at about 10:13.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQHxEi-gOT8&feature=related

The only anemones I haven't seen A. bicinctus in is C. adhesivum and H. malu but it wouldn't surprise me if they were found in them. They seem to very non-host specific.

Thank you sooooo very much.

I doubt you'll see bicinctus in malu because, as far as I know, they don't live in the same waters. I bet you're right about adhesivum though. To the best of my knowledge, the only place bicinctus and doreensis share the same waters is around the Chagos Archipelago, but the video said it was shot near Egypt?????? I get confused so easy. LOL.
 
Thank you sooooo very much.

I doubt you'll see bicinctus in malu because, as far as I know, they don't live in the same waters. I bet you're right about adhesivum though. To the best of my knowledge, the only place bicinctus and doreensis share the same waters is around the Chagos Archipelago, but the video said it was shot near Egypt?????? I get confused so easy. LOL.

No prob EC. I have suspected for a long time that M. doreensis' distribution is much broader than what is commonly reported.
 
Those are both great videos, thanks for sharing... Is it normal for there to be so many juvenile fish everywhere? Well I guess it must be there.. But I don't think i have ever seen that in many other videos or photos.
 
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