When adults, any of these too large for 34g?

E-A-G-L-E-S

New member
I am putting together my possible stock list and wanted to make sure they would all be suitable. I will choose 2-4 total most likely(depending on size of choices).
34g Solano rimless mixed reef.

Please comment either way on any on the list:

Green Chromis
Limbaugh's Chromis
Lined Chromis

Spinyhead Blennie
Lawnmower Blennie

Wheeler's shrimp goby
Yellow shrimp goby
Orange-spotted goby

Citron clown goby
Green clown goby

Helfrich's Firefish
Purple Firefish

Blue-spotted Jawfish
Yellowhead Jawfish

Yellow Assessor

Fridmani Orchid Dottyback
Magenta Dottyback
Splendid Dottyback

Red margin fairy wrasse
Lined fairy wrasse
Laboute's fairy wrasse
Temmidus fairy wrasse

Potter's Leopard wrasse

Filamented flasher wrasse
Blue flasher wrasse
McCosker's flasher wrasse
Carpenter's flasher wrasse
Lyretail flasher wrasse
DotandDash flasher wrasse
Cyaneous flasher wrasse
Yellowfin flasher wrasse
Eightline flasher wrasse

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Aside from the Leopard wrasse, they'd all be fine. Though, you'll likely loose them to jumping long before they outgrow the tank.
 
Are all wrasse's jumpers?
Any more predispositioned to do so than others?
I could use the top, but I am afraid it would cook the tank with no chiller.
I should try it for a couple days and note the temps.
 
You can make a top out of screen or eggcrate which will not increase temp at all. I had to make one for our 30g because we have a blue spot jawfish and a mystery wrasse in there. I did not want to lose either of those to jumping.

I have had experience with helfrichis, gold assessors, dottybacks, shrimp gobies, and the BSJ all in tanks smaller then a 34g.
 
What is the best option as far as allowing the most light through to the tank? I am just running a 150w HQI 14K so I need as much of its' PAR as I can get.
 
Red margin fairy wrasse
Lined fairy wrasse
Laboute's fairy wrasse
these three will get to big for that tank i would not put those fairys in that small of a tank..after keeping one you would see how much they swim and are very active and as adults these all reach 5" and the alboutei gets a bit larger..the last fairy you have i have never seen a name for at latin name would be more helpfull..with that being said with almost all the wrasses you are going to need a top and for sure with fairy and flashers..just no way around it they are expert jumpers..the fire fish are jumpers as well...i wold also leave off the leopard wrasse as well..the other fish you have listed should be fine..not sure what a Lyretail flasher wrasse is and good luck finding an eightline you don't see those very often and i have not seen any for sale for almost a year now
 
Sorry, that is a Cirrhilabrus temminckii(male only).
Temminck's fairy wrasse.

So you reccomend no fairy wrasse at all and the Potter's leopard wrasse is out :(.
The Lyretail flasher wrasse is Paracheilinus angulatus.
So the flasher wrasse's would be good with a top(as well as firefish), and the rest of the list is good?
 
Pretty much only the chromis, blennies, and assessor are okay in a rimless tank. Jawfish and wrasses WILL be on the floor within a month.
 
Search for bradleyj and bird netting. It doesn't really block any light and you can make it low profile so it won't take away from your tank's aesthetics.
 
You can make a top out of screen or eggcrate which will not increase temp at all. I had to make one for our 30g because we have a blue spot jawfish and a mystery wrasse in there. I did not want to lose either of those to jumping.

I have had experience with helfrichis, gold assessors, dottybacks, shrimp gobies, and the BSJ all in tanks smaller then a 34g.

Mesh which is 1/4 inch holes will work but egg crate will not keep firefish, jawfish, or wrasses in the tank.
 
i use the same thing that brad uses and it works great..i got all the stuff at home depot for cheap..need netting with 1/4" holes anything larger won't work and eggcrate is for sure not going to work..also the temminckii is out as well..if you want to keep a fairy try one of the smaller ones like the lubbocki or rubriventralis
 
I agree that eggcrate can be to big, that is why I have a layer of mesh over the eggcrate at this point. Eventually I will get rid of the eggcrate and just use a screen. The BSJ was kind of an impulse buy so I overbuilt the cover to start.
 
Filamented flasher will get too big for your tank. I have seen filamented flashers in the 5" range. The eightline flasher is the most aggressive flasher and would not make a very good choice in a smaller tank.
 
Green Chromis dont get too big for a 34g in my past experience.

The eightline flasher is supposedly rare, so it would have been hard to get one of those anyways. I'll keep the filamented adult size possibility in mind.
 
The eightline flasher is supposedly rare, so it would have been hard to get one of those anyways. I'll keep the filamented adult size possibility in mind.

It is actually a pretty easy fish to find; you might not find it all the time at the online retailers though. Most stores can get you one when they receive shipments from the red sea.
 
It is actually a pretty easy fish to find; you might not find it all the time at the online retailers though. Most stores can get you one when they receive shipments from the red sea.

wow i need to shop at your stores then because i been looking for a couple of them and can't find one..looked at online and stores and there are a ton of great stores in michigan and the detroit metro area and still can't find any....they can get all kinds of other great harder to find wrasses but i very rarely see eightlines at all..i have one male now..and i got it from a fellow reefer with a trade of another wrasse that i had..but yes i have seen some large filamented
 
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