Stomatopods
New member
Crustaceanhi! I love the G. Chiragra but I don't think it is interactive enough can y'all tell me some interactive but tough species that can kill everything a chiragra can not including peacock. Thanks!!!
Most gonodactylids are diurnal and will close up their burrows or cavities at night with rubble.
Whether or not this is true for Chiragra, somebody else who's had them would need to confirm.
My personal favorite species would be Neogonodactylus Wennerae, They are very hardy, very active (at least all mine have been) and they are somewhat passive in that most of the ones I got never seemed to bother anything larger than themselves.. including emerald crabs which coexisted peacefully. Their availability is very good since they are a common hitchhiker, meaning people will willingly just give them away. They roam a lot around the tank, but can be kept in systems as small as 5 gallon. They don't require anything specialized (O. scyllarus's burrow, L. mac's sand) and just overall the perfect beginner hobbyist friendly species. Some color morphs don't have the prettiest coloration but they're not ugly or anything.
Now I'm not saying they're my favorite species of all stomatopods, I have a number of them (including one of my favorites being a species I hate speaking of) but N. wennerae is the best species to have in my book for the average hobbyist just learning.
O. scyllarus comes second for interactivity and availability, but males are rare, so there's kinda that support for leaving males in the ocean to prevent the increasely smaller numbers, and collectors don't know how to sex them. Their frailness to shell rot in home aquariums is a pretty big nuisance as well, making them one of the least forgiving species and more of an expert only species IMO... let's not get started with the burrow either.
Peakcock!
Peacocks are extremely frail, they're beautiful and nice in personality, but in all honesty.. how many people do you know that had one the full potential lifespan and never received shellrot? Sure some, but not enough to justify them as good animals to keep in the hobby.
I don't mind people having them, but the more I think about it, they are extremely fragile animals in the hobby, I think they're the toughest thing I've had for the lengths of having a perfect burrow, maintaining water quality more serious then my SPS system (and still seeing SR on my males), and generally, luck with them surviving every molt.
Calappidae said:maintaining water quality more serious then my SPS system (and still seeing SR on my males)
You have to remember though that they do get shell rot in the wild too so it's not as if that is solely a consequence of poor water quality in the home aquarium. There are people on this forum that have kept Peacocks for several years, even in very simple systems. There's a thread on here about a Peacock named Betty that is a few years old and still alive as far as I know. It can be done. Plus, many of the Peacocks we get are already pretty old and at max size or very close to it so the fact that they "don't live long" is probably at least somewhat exaggerated.
A lot of people do keep O. scyllarus successfully, Kharn, Islandoftiki, Roy, etc, but you have to consider these people are all very well educated and know what they're doing like the back of their hand, but that's only a few people.. RC is big, but not that big in comparison to the world. Sure, this boils down to the general lack of education LFS have with stomatopods, but O. scyllarus isn't as forgiving as say.. a G. chiragra which somebody can bring home and it takes care of itself burrow wise and doesn't have as much shell rot risk.
They're a nice stomatopod to have and wonderful pets when things do work out, just their difficulty is a bit much in comparison to the majority of things in this hobby. I don't mean to exaggerate their impossibility to have, just the general tough time they do give owners in order for them to have success. When it works, it works, when it doesn't, it doesn't.