Beautiful fish. I'm definitely going to try one after I have a Regal Angel established and then I should be done stocking wise (on large fish).
What is that yellow and blue butterfly in the first picture? Chaetodon Fasciatus?
Science is all about experimentation. We experiment with animals all the time; this is nothing new. The idea that we may kill one or two fish (or more) in the process of learning about the fish and its care is just a natural part of the scientific learning process, and to say that doing this is a negative thing in our hobby is not entirely accurate, if in fact it is done in the name of science and research.
Sure, you are going to lose fish along the way; however, at some point, the losses decrease due to increased knowledge and information gained from those fish that died in the name of research. And they represent the first steps into a more successful keeping of that same fish later on down the line.
Please do not be so naive.
This is a hobbyist not a scientist.
I do not understand this train of thought... Do you feel the same towards larger animals as well or just fish?
Would you get a dog or a horse just to see if you could keep it alive? I doubt it...
Please do not be so naive.
This is a hobbyist not a scientist.
I do not understand this train of thought... Do you feel the same towards larger animals as well or just fish?
Would you get a dog or a horse just to see if you could keep it alive? I doubt it...
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He did very well in this mixed reef. I have since sold the tank and fish but I enjoyed for a year and now someone else is enjoying him. Sorry it is not a Queen but I don't think Queen angels come from the middle of the ocean? Try adding different corals to her tank and see how she does?
Revisited this thread and wondering if there is more experience out there to be shared?
I can't imagine why there would be any change in copps situation but it would be interesting to hear what he has to say.
how long did that fellow have his Queen?I wasn't thinking of John... a local reefer... praised the glory of a Queen angel in a reef.... a while later, couldn't sell it fast enough.
So, I was wondering if this is typical or atypical.
we've both discussed all of those topics to death but I had some questions about the particular fellow you mentioned.Gary, I've discussed this before. Many fish, including angels, are great in reefs... until something goes wrong. Things go wrong for reefers... you can't change that. And when it does, the compatibility structure changes.
Also, there is a whole lot of discussion about what make a "reef".... many different people keep many different corals.
Holocanthus ciliaris gets HUGE.
I do agree Angelfish will pick on unhealthy corals.
This can be a good thing.