Half Vaped
New member
I have three Leopard Wrasses in my 150G: M. bipartitus added ~December 2015, M. meleagris added ~June 2016 and a male M. geoffroyi added November 2016. The M. biparitus and M. meleagris were about 2 - 2.5 inches when added; they're about 3 inches now. The M. geoffroyi was already full grown at over 4 inches when I got him.
The three have been "getting along" great, as in they basically just ignored each other and did their own thing, swimming all around. Until the past few days when the M. geoffroyi has been relentlessly attacking my poor M. bipartitus every time it shows its face. The M. bipartitus has been hiding in the rocks and only comes out for food. But the M. geoffroyi chases it back to the rocks as soon as he notices it's out. The M. meleagris is unaffected.
I can't get a good pic of M. bipartitus since it's mostly hiding now, but it looks like the spots on its face are starting to elongate. Could it be that it's transitioning to male, which is causing the M. geoffroyi to act aggressively?
I feed heavily, usually thrice daily and I have over 250 lbs. of rock. So there is no shortage of food or shelter.
What can I do? Will the M. geoffroyi calm down and let the M. bipartitus be? Or do I need to remove one of them?
The three have been "getting along" great, as in they basically just ignored each other and did their own thing, swimming all around. Until the past few days when the M. geoffroyi has been relentlessly attacking my poor M. bipartitus every time it shows its face. The M. bipartitus has been hiding in the rocks and only comes out for food. But the M. geoffroyi chases it back to the rocks as soon as he notices it's out. The M. meleagris is unaffected.
I can't get a good pic of M. bipartitus since it's mostly hiding now, but it looks like the spots on its face are starting to elongate. Could it be that it's transitioning to male, which is causing the M. geoffroyi to act aggressively?
I feed heavily, usually thrice daily and I have over 250 lbs. of rock. So there is no shortage of food or shelter.
What can I do? Will the M. geoffroyi calm down and let the M. bipartitus be? Or do I need to remove one of them?