For those who keep anthias . . .

Steve,

Your initial choice of a group of resplendents is a great choice. A mixed group of Resplendents (P. pulcherimmus) and Sunsets (P. parvirostris), and toss in a couple Flame anthias (P. ignitus) and a few Randall's Anthias (P. randalli) would be an excellent display.

Your feeding regime is good and will provide enough nutrient mass for these anthias. It might take a while to get these particular anthias to voraciously accept pellets. Autofeeders help a lot, but, as mentioned previously, these particular species are not aggressive feeders. Generally, if the pellets land on the sand, they will lose interest. They can be trained to eat pellets, it just takes a much longer time period.

Personally, with your husbandry level and other tankmates (like my C. Earlei's you are holding :) for me - I wonder if they are named after Dr. Sylvia Earle, pioneer in deep ocean research?), I would recommend the above grouping or group. These are somewhat more challenging & rewarding group. The above recommended anthias is based on your earlier mention that you liked the Resplendents.

There are other anthias groupings, it just depends upon what you are looking for in appearance / behavior.

Don't forget - Serranocirrhitus latus (Sunburst) groups or individuals are also excellent choices that mix with all reef fish & conspecific anthias.

QUOTE=snorvich;17337489]They are going into an established 330 gallon tank. Which anthias group would you recommend? That tank gets fed PE mysis (morning), NLS pellets (twice per day), spirulina flake (once per day).[/QUOTE]
 
I have my Bartletts going on 4 years. 3 huge males in a 120g. I have tried adding females over the years, but have been unsuccessful.
 
I had a group of 10 Bartletts that got along great for the first couple of months. They would hang together most of the time and at night would cruise around in a really tight ball. Then all hell broke loose. They can be downright nasty to eachother. Some jumped, some just disappeared. I'm now left with one.

Ken
 
I routinely see both Lyretails and Carberryi anthias doing very well here in Knoxville.

I'm with you guys on liking the Maldives version of the Lyretails better but the other people at the store disagree with me and here's why: the color difference between the males and females of the normal variety (orange female versus purpleish male) is a lot more pronounced than the Maldives variety (orange female versus red male). We actually stopped carrying the Maldives males. You guys should be able to get them pretty ding dang easily. They're available on a lot of the wholesaler lists all the time (called Yellow Breasted Red Male Lyretail or something like that).

I think the Carberryis go pretty underappreciated. I really like those and they stay much smaller.
 
I have a red stripe and 3 lyretails (1 male, 2 females) in a 200 gallon. The male lyretail and the red stripe chase each other around sometimes, but do not nip. They are all over the tank, although the red stripe has this nice little cave he likes to sleep and the other fish are constantly trying to kick him out of the cave. :)
 
We've kept lyretails, sunburst, flavogutattus, and borbonius.

We had our single secondary male lyretail for over 8 years. The flav's were fine for quite awhile, then beat the snot out of each other (we now have 2 of the trio).

The best luck keeping a surviveable trio has been with our borbonius. We've had them about 18 mos now, and they occasionally "fuss", they're doing extremely well. They're housed with waspfish, a couple of dwarf lion species and small scorpionfish.
 
Thanks to all. I will reread this thread, but I am now more inclined towards multiple species. Lots of great ideas above!!
 
A week into my bought harem of lyrtails and have lost one female but the other 3 are eating. At this point they will only take pe mysis, rods, roggers, brine, and H20 1-2 as it melts.

They are taking nls but they spit it back out....another week and hopefully they'll be eating it!

Great orange/yellow colors contrast greatly with my blue/purple/green corals and other fish!
 
Can anyone tell me what's the difference between Pseudanthias randalli and Pseudanthias pulcherrimus? I purchased two anthias labeled as Randall's anthias but i believe they are Resplendent anthias. They both turned into males in the qt tank, I want to get female but I am not going to be buying these from the store I originally bought them from. I'm not sure what to ask the new store for.
 
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