it took him 1 day and 11 hours...

Kengaroo131

Fish Crazy
it took my tomato clown one day and 11 hours to host my new green bubble tip anemone i must admit im a bit concered and have a few question that maby you can help me out with.

im happy that he took it as a host, but it looks like it might be beating up the anemone a little bit it looks like its picking at the center a little here and there is it just cleaning it? what exactly is it doing? should i take action? if so what should i do? here are a few pics i took when i got home from work.

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what do you guys think?
 
ooh wow i deffinatly just realized that the anemone is on the move he is now all the way to the left of the rock seen in the pics.

is that a good sign or bad?
 
i have pc's tanks about 4 or 5 month old i posted a thread a wile back asking what would be a good anemone for the tank and everyone told me a bubble tip would do fine under the pc's
 
did you just put the anenome in there, or has it been in the tank for awhile? my anenome moved for about the first day or two before it settled down...and it never moved after that. If your's has been in the tank for a little bit and all of the suddon its on the prowel, it might be a bad thing. Also, my tomato picks at my anenome every once in a while. I dont worry about it.
 
i just put the anemone in there like 2 days ago, and thanks for the relife haha that had me a little worried about the clown picking at it a little.
 
definitely the corals around it to make sure they don't get in the path of the sting, and make sure your powerheads are up high enough as to not suck it in. potential risks always become a reality when overlooked in this hobby...good luck with your nem!
 
The clown may not be allowing it to settle in or it is just moving around because the spot was just not right. All of my BTA's have moved considerable distances from the spots that I originally tried to place them in. They all move the first day and have been in the same spots ever since.
 
Actually sometimes a clown can get too ruff and can cause problems. But usually it is not a problem esp with just one clown. The biting you see could just be the clown getting used to the anemone. I have seen them mouth the tentacles when a clown is first introduced to a anemone. It probably will move the first couple of days till if finds a spot, They never like the spot you want them in.

Dave
 
ok thanks for the good info everyone. it now looks like it stoped moving its on the rock next to it to the left (completly off the small rock) the clown looks like it has made a "nest" area (he pushed a big hole of sand right where it is) it looks like its going to be tricky to feed though its on the side of the rock not straigh up.

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what dose everyone think?
 
another concern now is, is it getting enough light? its almost under an over hang well not so much but enough to filter some light out.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10051378#post10051378 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by mariner908
another concern now is, is it getting enough light? its almost under an over hang well not so much but enough to filter some light out.

That looks like a more natural spot for it.. If it is not getting enough light it will move again... Unlike a coral an anemone can move to more favorable conditions if it is not happy.

Dave
 
ok awesome! thanks a million everyone for walking me through this! hopfully he dose well. one more question. are the bubble tips ussaly easyer then any other anemone?
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10051884#post10051884 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by shred5
That looks like a more natural spot for it.. If it is not getting enough light it will move again... Unlike a coral an anemone can move to more favorable conditions if it is not happy.

Dave

Not necessarily. Some animals in unfavorable conditions will not expend the neccessry energy to keep on the search for a more "favorable" spot. In this case, this E. Quadricolor has obviously picked a spot to settle where it is receiving very low light especially because its only PCs. By roaming around the whole tank it has spent a lot of energy.

On another note, Power Compacts do not penetrate the water very much and when you have a BTA such as this one that is shadowed by a rock overhead with not much lighting reaching it, it will probably start to bleach gradually.

mariner908, I am sure whoever recommended that you should get a BTA said that your BTA should in the upper level of your tank, not the lower. I would say having a BTA in the upper level in the part of the tank under PCS is the minimal lighting for it yet yours is at the very bottom in a little dark area. That's not a good sign.
 
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