How long till I can add this fish to an aquarium?

spongeycrab

Member
I love these fish and I know they are difficult to care for. But I know to add them in as the first fish.





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The Boxfish is also referred to as the Spotted Boxfish, Blue Boxfish, Black Boxfish, or Whitespotted Boxfish. The various names are due to the dimorphic appearance of the male and female. The male is the more colorful of the two, with a vibrant blue body and a wide black swath covering the top of the body like a cap. The entire body is speckled with dots, white on black and black on blue while a thin horizontal stripe of orange adorns the tail. The female is entirely black with white dots.
This is a very difficult fish to keep in the aquarium setting by any other than the most experienced aquarist. It should have a minimum of a 50 gallon tank. Use caution if placing the Boxfish in a reef tank as they will often nibble at tubeworms. When stressed, the Boxfish releases a poisonous substance, called ostracitoxin, from its mucous glands which will kill other fish in the tank very quickly.
Very little success has been achieved in breeding these fish in an aquarium. When first introduced, the Boxfish can be fed a diet of live brine shrimp or bloodworms. After acclimatization, chopped squid, clams, mussels, and herbivore preparations can be fed.
 

flower

Well-Known Member
Welll...are you on the expert level? The fact it poisons the tank when stressed or as it dies means it may kill every critter in the tank at one swipe and stress means if the water quality is off or you put your hand in the tank to fix a rock...is it really worth the risk?
It is indeed a beautiful awesome looking fish.
 
S

smallreef

Guest
it also gets HUGE... it says a 70g minimum... but I can tell you that even in a 70 in a year or 2 it will NOT be happy...
also you can ONLY put non-aggressive tank mates with it.. it is a slow swimmer so if you have a bunch of fast moving fish it will not eat...
 

geridoc

Well-Known Member
They have a beak that requires grinding down - usually by feeding live crustaceans frequently. This is a very difficult fish to keep long term. IMHO, it is best left in the ocean.
 

geridoc

Well-Known Member
I know what you mean. Some day I'll build my 2000 gallon reef and stock it with Moorish Idols, but until then its Heniochus for me.
 
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