Which Anthias for a school in 120gallon

AliciaP

New member
As stated in the title, I would like to get a school of Anthias for my tank. Just not sure which fish to choose. I have about $200 to work with. Any suggestions?
 
IME dispar, ignitus, and parvirostris tend to hang out with each other the most. Lyretails are also beautiful and very hardy, but keep a bit more distance between each other. Squarespots are just too big, and bartletts almost always turn all male, and stay separated after that.
 
Your question sounds like you want fish that will tightly school, like FW tetras. There are't any. Sorry if I misinterpreted .
 
How about Bartlett's Anthias? i have 5 in my 125. colorful and very active.

How long have you had them? From what I have read, schooling is a protective device and in most cases the schooling fish fight to become the dominant one and you usually end up with just one as they die off in battle with each other.
 
IME dispar, ignitus, and parvirostris tend to hang out with each other the most. Lyretails are also beautiful and very hardy, but keep a bit more distance between each other. Squarespots are just too big, and bartletts almost always turn all male, and stay separated after that.

+1 to this. Sd guy knows what he's talking about.
 
I have 3 large chromis that always swim together, Anthias won't do that? I have been researching to figure out which ones I like and I can't pick a favorite because I'm not finding any awesome info about them.
 
How long have you had them? From what I have read, schooling is a protective device and in most cases the schooling fish fight to become the dominant one and you usually end up with just one as they die off in battle with each other.


Couple of months. I have one male that is much bigger that the rest of them so he keeps them in line :)
 
I have a group of 6 Squampinis (Lyretails) and love them, one of my favorite additions to the tank so far. They swim together a fair bit, but they also go their separate ways during the day too, they are very active fish and added some nice color and movement i really felt i was lacking.

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I think our tanks are just too small for fish to school. Two anthias, in opposite corners of a 240 gal tank would probably consider themselves in the same school. A school of most fish on the reef will be scattered over hundreds of thousand of cubic feet. A school of FW fish may occupy no more than 100 cu.ft. (Arbitrary numbers)
 
I have 3 Lyretail and 3 Bartletts. While I think the Bartletts are prettier I like the habits of the Lyretail more. Would have been happier with 5 or 6 Lyretails. They really don't swim together much. Might be in the same general area but not together.
 
I think I'm going to go with 2 females and 1 male. My husband really wants Serranocirrhitus latus (Sunburst Anthias or something like that). Anyone have experience with them or can recommend another pretty two color Anthias?

I'm going to also get Banaii Cardinals. I heard that while they don't swim very much like Chromis or Anthias, they school better. Does that sound okay?

One more question, I have clowns that just started breeding (only took them 3 years!)... If I am looking to try and raise some fry, should I just forget having Anthias? Will they bother the clowns spawning much?
 
I think I'm going to go with 2 females and 1 male. My husband really wants Serranocirrhitus latus (Sunburst Anthias or something like that). Anyone have experience with them or can recommend another pretty two color Anthias?

I'm going to also get Banaii Cardinals. I heard that while they don't swim very much like Chromis or Anthias, they school better. Does that sound okay?

One more question, I have clowns that just started breeding (only took them 3 years!)... If I am looking to try and raise some fry, should I just forget having Anthias? Will they bother the clowns spawning much?

Bangaii cardinals will not shoal together. They will selectively pick each other off until there are only two cardinals left. One of the few fish that actually demonstrates shoaling in home aquaria is the threadfin cardinal. They do have a dismal mortality rate from shipping, but once established are quite hardy. I would look to add 9-13 in a 120. Very subtle, yet beautiful fish IMO.
 
I didn't know that about the Bangaii's! I thought they were some of the most peaceful fish. Shopping and planning for fish is tough lol.
 
I'm by far not an expert but ime with 15 stocky or bloodspot anthias I have lost down to a group of 8 now. When getting a school or group you don't know how many may be sub dominant males. I had 3 and they didn't fight that I saw but they slowly disappeared over the course of 2 years. More would mature until now I have 7females and a large dominant male. Here he is with a few of the females one is actually a squami. By the way this is in a 150g.
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I think our tanks are just too small for fish to school. Two anthias, in opposite corners of a 240 gal tank would probably consider themselves in the same school.

Agreed, which is why I think species selection is so important. Squarespots will do as you describe. Even lyretails to some extent. Dispar and ignitus will stay much closer. Even in my 4' 150g they would not occupy the entire tank!
 
I hope this question is of interest to the OP and not a derail, but does anyone know why LA lists ignitus as "easy" and almost all of the other anthias they sell as "moderate"? Is there really a difference?
 
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