bonebrake
Active Member
I recently purchased my first pair of Percula clownfish. They are still juveniles, about 1" each. They are eating well, but their behavior is really peculiar (pun intended). They rarely leave the glass almost always touching it, and every morning I think they must have died only to find them as close to the surface of the water along the edge of the tank as possible. I have extensive rockwork and caves and nooks and crannies, but I have yet to see them pick at the live rock for food or to rub against it or to go through a cave. What is up with this? I am fairly confident they are aquacultured, the LFS gave me the run around when I asked. I am basing this on their behavior, I cannot imagine this constant out in the open behavior being advantageous from a survival standpoint, and I am assuming captive breeding would select for this.
Water parameters:
Salinity: 1.026
Temp: 80
Ammonia: 0.0 ppm
Nitrite: 0.0 ppm
Nitrate: 2.5 ppm
Alk: 3.0 meq/L or 8.5 dKH
pH: 8.2
Calcium: 420 ppm
Phosphate: 0.2 ppm (I am still trying to ascertain the source of this. I use RO/DI water, and freshly mixed saltwater tests 0.0 ppm, I feed only a few pellets or flakes every other day. My current theory is remainder end product from the die off on the live rock from the cycle. The phosphates have always been present, but have come down slowly. Cycle finished about one month ago.)
:joy:
Water parameters:
Salinity: 1.026
Temp: 80
Ammonia: 0.0 ppm
Nitrite: 0.0 ppm
Nitrate: 2.5 ppm
Alk: 3.0 meq/L or 8.5 dKH
pH: 8.2
Calcium: 420 ppm
Phosphate: 0.2 ppm (I am still trying to ascertain the source of this. I use RO/DI water, and freshly mixed saltwater tests 0.0 ppm, I feed only a few pellets or flakes every other day. My current theory is remainder end product from the die off on the live rock from the cycle. The phosphates have always been present, but have come down slowly. Cycle finished about one month ago.)
:joy: