Onyx dilemma...

AliKat

New member
I have an extra onyx, as the older ocellaris clownfish I had recently died. This onyx is still small, and I'm not really sure what to do with it. Should I put it in the tank with the other two onyx I have that I'm trying to get to pair? They are all three still very young. How would having all three in the same tank affect their pairing?

Decisions, decisions. I can always keep him in my big tank. Just thought it might be neat to have the three together if it won't affect two of them pairing off.
 
you can keep ocellaris and percula in small groups, they kind of function as a harem or pack where there are two breeding individuals and...well the rest. I've never seen just three though usually 5
 
I just don't know. He's going to be by himself in the big tank or with the two others in the small one. Maybe three's a crowd?
 
Not to hijack his thread but if someone were to have a dedicated tank to just a large anemone, say ritteri, and clowns, how many clowns could you keep in the same tank if you put them all in as juvenilles to start?
 
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you could have a large family of them. To both of your questions. One will become the dom female, one the dom male.. and any other clown would become workers...:)
 
As I understand it the more the better. 7 seems to be the magic number ;) Also, if you add them all at the same time as juvis you have the best chance at a nice docile haram.

Also, it may be a good idea to pick a touch larger dom pair than the three, or more, smaller ones. I hope this helps.

Best in pairs or groups of 5, 7, etc...

I've talked with Rod Buehler about this recently and 3 can be done but there's more of a chance that two will pair up and shun the third.
 
How big are the 2 tanks?

Personally I'd keep them where they are and get your lonely one a new pal. If you've got the tankage why not? :D
 
I am not sure how stable the large groups are that we see in the wild.

Based on aquarium behavior and videos of wild "family" groups interacting, I would be willing to bet that the spawning pair in the anemone is stable but the rest of the individuals, especially the smallest ones, have a pretty high turnover rate. That's just a hypothesis based on observations, not a researched fact.
 
I keep three A. percula in my 20 g aquarium with my Haddoni carpet. They seem to do fine. The smallest one get put into his place once in a while but he still hanging around with the other two in the anemone (getting rather large for a 20 g tank. I have stop feeding the anemone other that whatever snails fallen on him and the fish food that he caught.
I have tried to keep more in a small tank (20g) before but not able to do it.
 
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