do whats best for the fish not the reef keeper.![]()
If that was so, they'd all be in the ocean.
It's a compromise.
Whilst you have a point Steve,
Good husbandry can also keep an person alive within four walls as long as they would in the free world. Maybe longer (as there is no chance of motor vehicle death, violent crime, drug abuse etc etc).
Nowhere near what's best for us though.
Much like fish are saved from predation in aquariums (hopefully)
Lifespan is not an accurate indication of what's best.
And less than 0.0000000000000000001% of fish caught for this hobby live longer than they would in the wild.
This is based on my experience, as I have caught hundreds of thousands of fish for this hobby for more than 10 years now.
It's a delicate subject, and one that I confront on a regular basis in response to my livelihood.
Additionally, attributing human emotions (eg what's best) to fish is a very subjective matter.
Not to get too off topic, but I have to disagree with you. I assume you were using hyperbole when you said that "less than 0.00000000000001% of fish caught for this hobby live longer than they would in the wild, but that is definitely untrue. If you think every dime sized hippo tang or green chromis would live longer in the ocean than in a reef aquarium, you are sorely mistaken. The number of juvenile fish (at an age that they would be caught for the aquarium trade) that die for every fish that reaches full mature size (and then survives at that age for years) is surprisingly high. 10 year old clownfish swimming around in the ocean are the exception, not the rule.
Okay so Back to the topic. I have a sohal tang. It's a good grazing fish and eats everything. When I mean good grazing, I mean it starts eating algae off the coral before i even set it down. However, it is very very aggressive towards other fish even wrasses. But on the plus side, it is very tame toward human and doesn't mind hands in the tank. I would suggest to place this fish in as last fish. Exceptions I have seen are from one of my friend's tank, his sohal is significantly bigger than all the rest of his fish and doesn't mind new additions.
People seem to have the most success when the Sohal is one of two things in its tank: undisputed master or clearly put into place by a much bigger fish. It seems the most aggression comes when the sohal is unclear where it stands.
Well, that is not exactly true. Good husbandry can produce a life span for appropriate fish that exceeds that found in the ocean. :dance:
thats also not exactly true. By segregating it away from it's potential mates in the ocean, you've eventually brought the pet fish's genes to a dead end, as they cannot contribute to the gene pool, being pretty much a death sentence.
Unless you plan on raising a line of the offspring.... then good luck.