coreno,
Yes, you can keep them together, and it needs much hiding place and open water.
benny z,
Thanks for the picture. It is one of the Cirrhilabrus rubriventralis- complex that includes four spp.; joanallenae, morrisoni, rubriventralis and unnamed species (Lenya). Juveniles and females of these four are quite similar and hard to tell which sp. it is on occasion.
It it came from northern Sumatra or Thiland it is joanallenae.
It is rubriventralis if it came from the Red Sea or Sri Lanka.
It is morrisoni if it came from Western Australia (off shore islands).
It is undescribed species (I call this the Goldtail) if it came from Kenya or South Africa (known as Kwa-Zulu); probably the same species.
Observe and take more shots of it and I hope it to be successfully maintained for some period to a male form. Perhaps a half of a year will make it a young male.
achillesheel,
Thanks for the pics; the first one shows the Pin-tail (Cirrgilabrus species), and the second to fourth are pics of Cirrhilabrus roseafascia, female form. I am showing these in my gallery for comparison between these similar spp.
Yes, you can keep them together, and it needs much hiding place and open water.
benny z,
Thanks for the picture. It is one of the Cirrhilabrus rubriventralis- complex that includes four spp.; joanallenae, morrisoni, rubriventralis and unnamed species (Lenya). Juveniles and females of these four are quite similar and hard to tell which sp. it is on occasion.
It it came from northern Sumatra or Thiland it is joanallenae.
It is rubriventralis if it came from the Red Sea or Sri Lanka.
It is morrisoni if it came from Western Australia (off shore islands).
It is undescribed species (I call this the Goldtail) if it came from Kenya or South Africa (known as Kwa-Zulu); probably the same species.
Observe and take more shots of it and I hope it to be successfully maintained for some period to a male form. Perhaps a half of a year will make it a young male.
achillesheel,
Thanks for the pics; the first one shows the Pin-tail (Cirrgilabrus species), and the second to fourth are pics of Cirrhilabrus roseafascia, female form. I am showing these in my gallery for comparison between these similar spp.