That is why i let all these dumbies run into the LFS and buy all the new nems.
If this is directed at me, then :fun2:!
I do agree that its best to keep nems separate during times like this. No question.
I've never made an impulse or uneducated nem purchase in my 25 years in this hobby. I refuse to join the "I'll buy as many nems as possible until I get that healthy one!" club. I respect the animals far too much to do that. On this particular request, I told my LFS not to order them unless they were guaranteed to have tight mouths, sticky tentacles, attached foot, deep coloration, and smaller than 8". Hence the sending of this photo to me showing what is currently available. My LFS sent me the photo for coloration reference as I asked them for specifically a dark blue gig and a red based mag.
I don't believe there is any definitive evidence that gigantea and magnifica can not cohabitate in the same aquaria of suitable size. They are both in the Stichodactylidae family, both have the exact same temperature, high random flow, and high lighting requirements, and they share most of the same host clown species, so why is it a given that they can't live in the same tank without killing each other off?
There are quite a few threads on RC, and around the net, in which many hobbyists are successfully keeping the two species together in the same tank, or in separate tanks but connected by the same sump. I've had my gig and mag together for some time now without any apparent problems. They have touched and mixed tentacles for several weeks at a time without either feeling a need to move or withdraw to a different spot. Both are 2 to 3 year captive specimens. My ocellaris move freely between the two nems all day long.
Lastly, based on what I see in that photo above, I would say that for nems that had just likely spent 48 to 72 hours in a dark bag of stagnant water, exposed to who knows how many temperature extremes, constant rough handling, and most likely a quick acclimation to the holding tank......they do look a bit stressed but generally still healthy at this time in their travels!!! They certainly aren't bleached, deflated, floating around or upside down, spilling their stomach contents, decaying or sloughing, or all shriveled up. I see no flotsam or jetsam in the water column indicating any dieing specimens.
Will I give them at least a week or two at my LFS before taking them home, yes. Will I purchase them if they show any negative signs, no.
I'm done responding to the critics and justifying my photo post. Certainly didn't intend to ignite a soap box discussion, which I'm finding all too often happens around here.
Everyone else, please enjoy the photo for what it was intended. A colorful representation of a mixture of several nice colorful nems!