I have a Red Sea Reefer 170 reef tank with a mated pair of black ocellaris clowns. I got them second hand, and they’re of a decent size (male is ~2.5 inches, female is ~3 inches). Previous owner was not sure of their age. Other fish inhabitants include Midas blenny, long nose hawk fish, yellow watchman goby, royal gramma, and banggai cardinal fish.
It took a while to get to a state of fish peacefulness in my tank, but I finally got there about two months ago with the current mix of fish. Aside from some small territorial displays from the female clown when new fish were introduced, I had the tank to a point where I observed no aggression whatsoever between inhabitants. Of note, the two clownfish and the banggai were very social with each other. The three of them would even sleep together in the same corner of the tank at night.
Flash forward to 3 days ago, I noticed the banggai was in distress at the top corner of my tank. After more observation, I noticed that both clowns were picking on the poor banggai. By the time I realized what was occurring, it was nearly lights-out time, so I tried to give the fish some time in the dark overnight to calm down and figure it out. Unfortunately, the next day the behavior was even worse. My banggai’s fins got pretty ripped up. Based on the saltwater dried on the outside of my tank from splashing, I’m convinced the banggai would have jumped the tank and would be dead if I didn’t have a lid. At this point, I moved the banggai down to my sump where he has been chilling and recovering in peace and quiet ever since.
Needless to say, I was perplexed by how the clowns who were so peaceful with the banggai could suddenly turn violent toward him. Come to find out, after I noticed some other behavior changes, that the clowns made the largest cave in my rockwork their nest with eggs affixed to the cave ceiling.
I can only assume that the reason for the behavior change toward the banggai was the eggs. I’m wondering is it normal for clownfish to change their behavior when they have eggs? It there anything I can do here to help the situation? I imagine I can’t stop them from laying eggs, and from the other threads I’m reading, it’s possible they’re going to be laying every 2 weeks or so indefinitely
Will my banggai ever be able to go back to the display tank? If it comes to it I’ve got several local reefer friends who would happily rehome him to their much larger tanks.
Any insights and advice is appreciated.
It took a while to get to a state of fish peacefulness in my tank, but I finally got there about two months ago with the current mix of fish. Aside from some small territorial displays from the female clown when new fish were introduced, I had the tank to a point where I observed no aggression whatsoever between inhabitants. Of note, the two clownfish and the banggai were very social with each other. The three of them would even sleep together in the same corner of the tank at night.
Flash forward to 3 days ago, I noticed the banggai was in distress at the top corner of my tank. After more observation, I noticed that both clowns were picking on the poor banggai. By the time I realized what was occurring, it was nearly lights-out time, so I tried to give the fish some time in the dark overnight to calm down and figure it out. Unfortunately, the next day the behavior was even worse. My banggai’s fins got pretty ripped up. Based on the saltwater dried on the outside of my tank from splashing, I’m convinced the banggai would have jumped the tank and would be dead if I didn’t have a lid. At this point, I moved the banggai down to my sump where he has been chilling and recovering in peace and quiet ever since.
Needless to say, I was perplexed by how the clowns who were so peaceful with the banggai could suddenly turn violent toward him. Come to find out, after I noticed some other behavior changes, that the clowns made the largest cave in my rockwork their nest with eggs affixed to the cave ceiling.
I can only assume that the reason for the behavior change toward the banggai was the eggs. I’m wondering is it normal for clownfish to change their behavior when they have eggs? It there anything I can do here to help the situation? I imagine I can’t stop them from laying eggs, and from the other threads I’m reading, it’s possible they’re going to be laying every 2 weeks or so indefinitely
Will my banggai ever be able to go back to the display tank? If it comes to it I’ve got several local reefer friends who would happily rehome him to their much larger tanks.
Any insights and advice is appreciated.