Good points! I was just wondering because I have a very tight budget. Thanks for the reply! The owner did say they weren't wild caught so I may pick up a pair!Wild or captive bred makes a difference. I just paid $38 each for a wild pair.
Tank bred, if free of deformities should go for even more.
IMO most anemonefish are sold way below their value. If you consider that they can live for 20 to 30 years $50 is still cheap if compared to gobies that go anywhere from $20 to several hundreds but only live around 2 to 5 years. And there are many other rather short lived fish that go for hundreds to thousands.
Yours are still babies if they are only 6 years old. I had an ocellaris pair for 20 years and they didn't die due to old age but because a stupid heater got stuck. Ocellaris and percula can easily reach 30.I paid $25 a piece for mine in 2014....graduated college, got a job, bought a house... The pair is still going strong lol. As others have said its a very reasonable price for a fish that will live so long
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Wow, yeah I got them when they were babies and paired them. I keep them in a 30 gallon fish only tank, the only other one is a pajama cardinal. Lots of live rock, I have debated putting my 50w heater in the instead of the 150 (I got the tank from my dad) they are both eheim Jaeger heatersYours are still babies if they are only 6 years old. I had an ocellaris pair for 20 years and they didn't die due to old age but because a stupid heater got stuck. Ocellaris and percula can easily reach 30.
So, unless they die due to negligence or accidents, your ocellaris may still be around when your kids go to college...
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The heater that killed my 20 years old ocellaris was a Jäger as well. Any heater with a bimetal contact switch or mechanical relay will fail eventually, it's just a matter of time. And those heaters will always fail in the "on" state because the failure mode is that the contacts get arc-welded together. Newer heaters with internal electronic controllers that use solid state relays are better because if they fail it's mostly in the "off" state.... they are both eheim Jaeger heaters
Oh man. Well do you suppose my 50 watt will be enough? I keep my house about 70 in the winter and there's really only a little over 20 gallons of water in the tankThe heater that killed my 20 years old ocellaris was a Jäger as well. Any heater with a bimetal contact switch or mechanical relay will fail eventually, it's just a matter of time. And those heaters will always fail in the "on" state because the failure mode is that the contacts get arc-welded together. Newer heaters with internal electronic controllers that use solid state relays are better because if they fail it's mostly in the "off" state.
But generally it's best to use an external temperature controller and use the internal controller just as backup.
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