Weedy scorpionfish

My friend had 2 and he had very hard time feeding it.
It only like live damsel:(
If you have one that eats well then buy it but keep in mind it will eating anything it can swallow.
 
Just like lionfish its great with corals
If the corals are bright the fish are bright too.
Since it mimics the surrounding .
 
I had a red Rhinopias for a year in a 30G, with tons of red mushrooms. Like said before fine with coral. I got it trained on frozen silversides. Started with white mollies, free swimming in the tank. then after a few weeks i used some 18" tweezers and would hold the live molly. Couple weeks later and a long fast for the rhinopias he gobbled up frozen silversides. They are extremely hardy IME. I was relatively new to salt water, no skimmer, HOB filter, no ATO and lax with top offs. He did just fine till the day i traded him in to the LFS. Got kinda bored with the species tank.
 
They are difficult to feed like has been mentioned. I'm sure there are plenty of small shrimp and fish that would become snacks for the scorpionfish
 
A rhino would be perfect for a reef, as they have no interest in corals, nor do they perch on them, as their lionfish cousins occasionally do.

As for "hard to feed", I can't say that I agree with that, altho we did have one specimen that wouldn't QUITE get "on the stick", which was a PITA. FWIW, we've kept four Rhinos in the past...R. frondosa (x3) and R. eschmeyeri. I strongly recommend using a "stealth stick" as described in Tools of the Trade: Equipment & Techniques to Convert your Fish onto Frozen

Rhinos are very sedentary, and don't swim much at all, if ever. They do require some open space on the substrate, and will get up onto the rockwork if there isn't enuff space for them. The nice thing is they're very out and about fishes, so you'll always see them in your tank.

Being sedentary, and often looking like macro algae or rocks, they're prone to being picked at by browsing species (tangs, rabbitfishes, non-planktonic feeding triggers, angels, puffers, etc), so if you keep any of these, or plan to, a Rhino isn't a good fit.

If you have any more questions, ask away...
 
What are some reef safe fish you would put with them? I'm open to ideas (right now I only have a hogfish and a few wrasses in mind
 
Back
Top