Should I buy it?
An LFS by me has a very healthy looking Potter's Angel, medium size, $80.
He's eating pellets readily (he'll get more than that if I buy him), and doesn't seem very shy (although there really weren't any hiding places for him).
He's got a bit of red coloration, not like most Potter's I have seen.
They've had him for a few weeks.
My tank...
I have a 75 FOWLR, plenty of rock. Fairly peaceful tank, all small fish, but several of them...
2 ocellaris that spend much of their time hanging out by a powerhead.
1 clarkii, 1.5 inch, roams the entire tank, mostly behaving himself
6 chromis school, occasional bickering, nothing very aggressive
1 bicolor blenny 3 inches, hangs out in his favorite spot, and ventures out looking for algae now and then.
2 firefish, hover together in the center of the tank waiting for food to drift by
1 red dragonent, under 2 inches, blends into the rockwork, hunting all day
2 citrinis clown gobies, always darting through the rocks, making babies or something
1 sleeper goby, 3 inches, happily dumping sand all over the place
2 yasha gobies, hovering outside their lairs
1 2 inch scalefin anthias female
It seems like a long list when I write it out, but the habitats vary enough that the tank often looks like it doesn't have much in it.
I do 30% water changes every 3 to 4 weeks, and my nitrates are around 10-15ppm, so the bioload seems fine.
I imagine that that yashas and dartfish barely contribute... they are such small fish.
So the questions:
An LFS by me has a very healthy looking Potter's Angel, medium size, $80.
He's eating pellets readily (he'll get more than that if I buy him), and doesn't seem very shy (although there really weren't any hiding places for him).
He's got a bit of red coloration, not like most Potter's I have seen.
They've had him for a few weeks.
My tank...
I have a 75 FOWLR, plenty of rock. Fairly peaceful tank, all small fish, but several of them...
2 ocellaris that spend much of their time hanging out by a powerhead.
1 clarkii, 1.5 inch, roams the entire tank, mostly behaving himself
6 chromis school, occasional bickering, nothing very aggressive
1 bicolor blenny 3 inches, hangs out in his favorite spot, and ventures out looking for algae now and then.
2 firefish, hover together in the center of the tank waiting for food to drift by
1 red dragonent, under 2 inches, blends into the rockwork, hunting all day
2 citrinis clown gobies, always darting through the rocks, making babies or something
1 sleeper goby, 3 inches, happily dumping sand all over the place
2 yasha gobies, hovering outside their lairs
1 2 inch scalefin anthias female
It seems like a long list when I write it out, but the habitats vary enough that the tank often looks like it doesn't have much in it.
I do 30% water changes every 3 to 4 weeks, and my nitrates are around 10-15ppm, so the bioload seems fine.
I imagine that that yashas and dartfish barely contribute... they are such small fish.
So the questions:
- Should I leave well enough alone?
- Will the Potter's be picked on by my chromis and clowns?
- Will the Potter's and bicolor blenny both have enough microalgae to be happy? Or will they wipe it out?
- Will the Potter's pick on my yasha gobies?
- Will the Potter's eat the little sponges that keep popping up on my rock? What about the handful of hydroids in the tank?
- Have people had success with this species? And if so, what foods have you used?