Copperband Butterfly Help

leftyblite

Member
Saw a Copperband butterfly at the LFS yesterday. I had never seen one up close before and immediately wanted one. I have a 150G with a foxface, blue tang, fuzzy dwarf lion, and soon to be flame angel(currently in QT). Would a copperband be compatible with these fish?
I read somewhere that caution should be used with the lion. I've always though caution should be used when introducing any fish to the main tank. Just curious as I would like to make it an addition to my tank.
 

saltn00b

Active Member
i dont know alot about lions, so maybe somebody else can chip in on that, but the rest of the stock list is fine.
do you have a reef tank? they are sometimes known to be nippers, but it happens less often. they are sensitive fish, so make sure the LFS has kept them for a few days. also take the time to acclimate to a QT tank at least 3-4 hours and watch them for 6 weeks for ich, or black ich, lympho or bacteria infections. i have seen all of them on a CBBF. the tough part is getting them to eat. but if you start with live brine and start mixing in mysis, its a pretty easy way to ween them.
 

saltn00b

Active Member
also, they will decimate your worm population and possibly clam mantles. any feather dusters (mini or large hawaiian) and coco worms are pretty much doomed.
 

05xrunner

Active Member
its hard enough to get that fish to eat properly. a QT isnt going to do it established or not. They like to eat off the live rock and well thats not in a QT. I think Copperbands are almost up there with Morish Idols
 

saltn00b

Active Member
not quite. are you talking from experience? i am. i have kept 3 small-medium CBBFs in a 29g QT for the proper time required.
 

05xrunner

Active Member
yes..I have had a copperband for a while but it still didnt survive.
It would eat like a pig at first then they just stop eating. and it eventually died.
I dont QT anything.
 

dischirm

Member
I had same experience as Runner... Got one, It ate like a pig, and I was so happy and thought everything would be fine, that I had gotten a "good one", but then it stopped eating after about 2-3 weeks and died within days of that.
 

nybyrne

Member
Have had my copperband for about month now and have not had any problems. He was picky at first but he eats my homemade fish food when ever I feed it to the tank. He did wipe out my feather duster population in a few days. Fish is very cool.
 

saltn00b

Active Member
what did you guys feed? if you provide a homemade diet including clams / mussels it should do very well.
 

dinogeorge

Member
IMO, the majority of the folks who buy copperbands do not do enough research to keep them. They die because people don’t understand their feeding habits or what they require in their diet. Just looking at the fish tells you that they are specialized feeders. It’s not the fish….it’s the keepers.
Indeed there are some fish that require such a specialized diet, or just do not do well in captivity, that trying to keep them is a disservice to the industry. But from my real experience, these fish are not among them, provided that you know what you’re doing.
 

leftyblite

Member
OK, this is why I love this site. I have tried to do research on this fish, but there is nothing like personal experience to help. Im just not sure if this is the right fish for me at this time. Thanks for all the help and advice.
 

dinogeorge

Member
Now THAT is good fish husbandry. You did your research and decided that this fish is not for you. GREAT example of responsible fish keeping.
 

xdave

Active Member
Originally Posted by Dinogeorge
IMO, the majority of the folks who buy copperbands do not do enough research to keep them. They die because people don’t understand their feeding habits or what they require in their diet. Just looking at the fish tells you that they are specialized feeders. It’s not the fish….it’s the keepers.
Indeed there are some fish that require such a specialized diet, or just do not do well in captivity, that trying to keep them is a disservice to the industry. But from my real experience, these fish are not among them, provided that you know what you’re doing.
Actually, the 1000 dying I was referring to was before that one people buy ever gets to the store. I can only guess the home aquarium survival rate.
When I worked at a distributor, 30% arriving live and 50% of those making it through the following 48 hours was considered a good batch. (BTW, we paid big extra $s to have them individually bagged) Only 5% - 15% survive the actual capture, 10% - 25% of those make it through the trip to the collection station. They loose another 25% -50% in the next 48 hours.
 
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