Anyone keep blue reef chromis?

leveldrummer

New member
I was browsing live aquaria last night and say these blue reef chromis, they seem to be a stunning dark blue color, and seem like they would be a great addition to any aquarium, but I have never seen them in picturers of tanks or in fish stores. So whats the deal with these? Are they a good addition to an aquarium? or not?
 
They're very pretty, but tend to be quite fragile and not good shippers. I'm not sure how long they live in the wild either. My LFS owner told me that he's tried several times in his own tank starting with 10 and ending with one or two.
 
i have had in 9-10 at the lfs i work at, none of them lasted more than a week. all arrived alive but i think they ship very very poorly. its a shame cause they are quite pretty. but very expensive considering they basically die within a week of getting them
 
This seems to be par for the course on any chromis. has anyone kept any large shoals for very long at all? they always seem to dwindle down to a few
 
They are actually pretty hardy once you treat them. I would recommend treating them for intestinal parasites specifically. I've noticed if they aren't treated properly for that, they get thin even though they devour everything they see.

They shoal pretty well but when they get aggressive to each other, you need plenty of tank space so the guy getting picked on can run away and hide for a bit. The aggression cools down and everyones happy again. You have a small tank and someone will get cornered and take a beating.
 
I noticed those on LA a few months ago and they have never been available. Never seen them in any of the 3 LFS I frequent either. I saw them once on DD, but of course it was when my QT had residents already.
 
I have tried them a couple times last year or so. Got just one each time. They lasted roughly about a week or so. They appeared healthy with no outward signs of problems.
 
thats how we get ours, they appear healthy, fat, swimming well, i dont really remember if they were eating well or not. but they always perish in a week or so, no slow wasting. they have been readily available from our supplier for quite a while now.
 
I purchased 3 blue chomis in early October 20112. They, along with a diamond goby were the first fish for my 5 week old 120. The cycle was finished and they did quite well except for bullying by the larger dominate chromis. Interestingly, this fish assumes a darker color from time to time. This larger fish focused on one of his comrades and quickly cowed it. I decided to add 2 additional slightly smaller chromis. Immediately the slightly larger of the two newest started to bully his smaller tankmate and the dominate larger continued to bully both the weaker of the original 3 plus the smaller of the 2 new fish.

I tried heavy feeding several times a day. I did get good growth on all except the smallest. After about 1 month the smaller of the original three seemed completly cowed and not eating well. Seems much of the violence occurs at night over hiding places in the rock work. These fishes spend much of the day hiding, coming out only to eat. I watched the little one slowly go down hill. Apparently, I have a good environment as several of this fish would show up with wounds that would heal in a week or two. But I had no deaths.

Finally, in May 2013, the weakest of the original three came out, or was forced out, into the open. He had a high respiration rate and a shrunken belly. Placed him into the refugium. Lasted 2 days, ignoring all the pods, and died. My first tank death.

Remember the the little one? Something strange happened. I thought he would follow the other then suddenly he started swimming over the top of the reef. The dominate fish did try to put him down but but the small fish would maneuver, avoiding the bully. The other smaller chromis who originally also bullied his smaller tank mate started hiding more. This complete role reversal came a complete surprise. The answer came in the form of another new arrival a lawn mower blenny. The blenny, named "Jack" will literally push his way into a fight between the chromis. I have seen him ram that large dominate chromis and now the bully will give way when Jack shows up. Like most lawn mowers, Jack moves around quite a bit but he has certain favorite perches. When Jack finally slows down for the night, he likes one particular spot and now the tiny chromis sleeps next to him. They actually get quite close even touching. All the others now leave the small one pretty much alone and Jack continues his benevolent rule. [ He even knocked a cleaner shrimp off my yellow diamond goby!] Seems he does not like conflict. Other than the above he never bothers anyone else in the tank. And NO I do not have a video or photos as it usually happens very fast and since his rule has been established now rarely. I still have the remaining 4 chomis and a fishy peace reigns in the tank. :lol2:
 
I'm surprised to read this. I had one years ago and it did great, lasted a few years. I see them pretty regularly at my LFS, but the cost has gone up. I think mine was around $8-$10, now they're just over $20. I don't have a clue about them in groups, but they get up to 5", so you'd need a large tank for that.
 
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