S. Haddoni in Reef?

orcafood

Member
I have a 8in or so green S. Haddoni that I recently placed into my 90g mixed reef. I am going to be upgrading to a 180g soon.

I have been told by many to get rid of it because it will eat my fish. Please tell me about your experience with these anemones. Will it be better of in my 180g?

I would hate to loose my fish (and so would my wallet), so do you guys think I should sell/give it away? Would a clown benefit the situation, my occies seem uninterested?
 
I would say to get rid of it. I actually started a 40 gal anem tank when i upgraded to reef. I have a white carpet about 9 inches and other anems. If you have coral in your tank the carpet will kill them. depending on the aggression and movement of the anem it will most certainly devour any fish that come in contact with it. Ive had a carpet eat a med. sized clarki before. Even tho it was fed regularly.
 
s. haddoni are not natural hosts for occies they will pay no attention to the carpet. sorry for the third post I kept noticing things and your post. I kinda have A.D.D.
 
Can't tell you to keep it or get rid of it. It depends on how much risk you are willing to take, and if the anemone is important enough for you to take the chance.

With that said, I had a haddoni for a little over 7 years in my 50 gallon. During that time, the carpet made a meal of many fish. From a flame angel, small foxface, cherub angel... to a purple tang (that was housed with it for the entire 7 years) and many less expensive fish. For me, the carpet was the centerpiece of the tank so there was never a thought to get rid of it on my part.

I miss my haddoni, and if I could find a nice small healthy one I'd get one again in a heartbeat.

So, to answer your question..... yes they do have the potential to eat anything that bumps into them accidentally or not. If losing even one of your fish would upset you, then yes... I'd recommend finding it another home or perhaps setting up a tank just for the haddoni and clowns.

Tom
 
Yes i agree aww420. Ive had my fair share of loss due to a carpet where it didnt belong. If you plan to have coral or med. or small. fish then the haddoni has to go. Theres not a big market for carpets anymore due to there aggression and stinging strength. too dangerous to take the risk. its better to give it away a 50 anem or sell. than to loose $100s. and time
 
very well put Tom. I guess every one has there favorite fish and no matter what they just dont have the heart to get rid of them. Which is why i started my Anemone tank. more hassle and a hole in your pocket. but to me it was worth it. that and no more loss in fish. If you start an new tank try to make it a bit larger tho orcafood
 
Hey tom, not to get off topic do you now anyone with a Pink or electric green carpet? I saw a site where they have them for sale. and they look incredible but there was no price and all sales are done by phone and with a commercial account. I saw that you where a manager at a LFS. just wondering cuz my local cant order them.
 
I currently have 3 haddonis, my oldest being 9+ years old. In all that time I have only lost 2 fish to them -- a watchman goby and a mandarin dragonet. Have kept dwarf angels, larger angels, tangs, and the like with them with no real issues. Of course I very well could just be lucky. Should note that 2 of the 3 host clownfish.

And now I HAVE to post pictures of them. ;)

Tan ( 9+ years old )

Haddoni4_15_08.jpg


Blue ( 2+ years old )

BlueHaddoniflash.jpg


Green ( 6+ months old )

HiddenHaddoni5.jpg
 
I've had my carpet for a number of years. Lost track actually. I haven't lost any fish in several years. Don't plan on it any time soon either. There are steps you can take to reduce the risk of fish getting eaten by a carpet.
1. Don't over stock the tank. The more crowded the
tank becomes, the higher the likelihood that someone will
bump into the carpet.
2. Don't stock aggressive fish or fish that don't get along. A fish
trying to escape another can easily make a wrong turn.
3. Always quarantine all new fish and feed them very well while
in quarantine. Fish that are week, stressed, or ill seem to end
up in the carpet.
4. Startle the carpet, causing it to retreat under its rock, before
placing new fish in the tank. This will give the new guy time
to learn its surroundings before the carpet comes back out.

I have NEVER lost a coral to my haddoni. I don't even think that's a legitimate concern. Once settled in, these anemones rarely move. Mine has moved once the whole time I've had it. That was because the MH went out, and the only light it had for two weeks was PC's. Even when/if they move, they don't move fast. You will have plenty of time to clear a path in front of it.

These are large carnivores like all large anemones. There is always a risk when mixing predator and prey. That doesn't mean we can't drastically reduce that risk. Every fish I lost to my carpet can be contributed to something I did wrong. As long as my fish stay healthy, and I don't do something stupid, I don't believe I will lose any more fish to my carpet.

To answer your questions. I, and many others, believe that resident clowns will help keep fish away from the anemone. Especially if you get large clowns like saddle backs. They may not keep all the fish safe by themselves, but I think they help.

I also think you should keep the anemone. If it is healthy and doing well in your care, passing it off to someone else may be a death sentence for the carpet. To many of these animals get purchased, the owner takes no precautions, and their fish get eaten. Then the anemone gets passed around until someone ends up killing it. These are not the evil blood thirsty animals that attack your fish in their sleep, like some people will have you believe. Fish can learn to live side by side with these anemones without harm.
 
hey todd, Yeah i know that sometimes people get lucky but like you said. you have had tangs and large angels. a little harder for them to get sucked into to the carpet anem black hole. by the way great color in that blue carpet. very nice. it is even giving your skunks a blue tint, unless thats the lighting. and it is less likely for a fish to wonder close to an anem that is hosted. especially if there happens to be an aggressive clown in there, such as your clarkis keeping them at bay.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13330036#post13330036 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by aww_420
hey todd, Yeah i know that sometimes people get lucky but like you said. you have had tangs and large angels. a little harder for them to get sucked into to the carpet anem black hole. by the way great color in that blue carpet. very nice. it is even giving your skunks a blue tint, unless thats the lighting. and it is less likely for a fish to wonder close to an anem that is hosted. especially if there happens to be an aggressive clown in there, such as your clarkis keeping them at bay.

Believe it or not, my Clarkiis are kind of wimps. When I put my purple tang in there, they ran and hid in their Haddoni. And my flame angel likes to tick them off once n a while -- by hanging out by them.

And the skunks are really gentle, my potter's angel seems to like to hang out in that part of the tank, near the skunks and their haddoni. Before my mandarin got eaten, the skunks would gently push it away if it got too close.

Here is the purple tang announcing his presence with authority. ;)

purple-1.jpg
 
lol. how come everyone i know with a flame dwarf says that they are jerks. My buddy bought a flame about a month ago. the little guy terrorizes everyone. hes about 1 3/4 to 2 inches. shows the maroon clowns who's boss, all the time.
 
I have had a carpet for a few months now and the only down side I have had to is is a powder brown tang. But I put all blame on in and not the carpet. For some reason he would go up to the carpet and bite on it. Of course that tang had to be on crack because I have never seen a fish act the way he did. But I guess my carpet got tired of it and one day it did sting it a good one. When I first seen my tank I thought oh great its got ick but then it turned I seen that it didnt have any spots on the other side of it. Then it keep on making diving runs on the carpet. Well I guess one day while I was at work the carpet said no more that was his spot and he wasnt going to move for the tang. And that was that. I didnt see my tank for a few days and then I seen a few bones show up and then I really knew what happen. All I can say is he had it coming to him.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13334316#post13334316 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by orcafood
So will Toddrtrex's 'tan' anemone ever color up to be more green? Or is that the color it will always be?

It has pretty much been that same color for 9+ years.
 
Just a couple things that need to be cleared up.

Although haddoni carpets are not natural ocellaris hosts, there are many people on this list who have had their ocellaris accept haddonis as hosts. (FWIW: ocellaris are notorious for not liking anything except their natural hosts. I had a pair that lived with a BTA that took up half the tank for almost 2 years before they accepted it as a host. 90% of the "my clown won't go in the anemone" post deal with ocellaris that won't go into an unnatural host.)

There is still quite a good market for nicely colored carpet anemones, as the $200 - $700 price tags for blues and reds will attest. The dull colored carpets are still about the same as they always have been. (At least around here)

Haddoni carpets are probably the least likely of all host anemones to bother your corals. They stay on the bottom and tend not to move much compared to other host anemones.

This one doesn't need to be cleared up, just a differing experience; I have never had a clown that chased other fish away from an anemone (except for other clowns). I have had a couple clowns that would grab small fish, snails and hermit crabs and shove them into the anemone. I can't keep any sort of clear up crew for very long in my small haddoni tank. (tank is small, not the carpet)

The bigger your tank, the less problem you will have losing fish to your haddoni.

Grazers (tangs, dwarf angels) are much more likely to be caught than predators (psuedochromis, hawkfish, etc)

There are a lot of people who keep haddonis with minimal fish loss in large tanks, but if you have a one of a kind or really expensive fish, I certainly wouldn't take the chance of keeping it in the same tank as your carpet.
 
My occelaris never went into anything until I got the magnifica. When I removed it, they immediately moved over to the haddoni.
 
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