I have a lot of love for the yellow coris wrasse (which I've kept in the past; paired even), but my current love of nano-reefs has led me to keeping Possum and Pink-streaked wrasses; they are adorable!
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I feel like if you stick with the ones that stay under 5" you'll be good. Or sort by reef safe on LA or similar. Basically on the wrasses mentioned here:I’m also curious what to be aware of when adding wrasses? Do any eat snails like trochus or nassarius snails? One person above mentioned one killing tuxedo urchin. Arrow crab etc. Ouch.
Fairy wrasses are completely reef and invert safe! See article in above post.I had a Chisel Tooth Wrasse. It immediately killed an Arrow Crab, a Tuxedo Urchin, a Longspine Urchin, and all my Peppermint Shrimps. I've tried to find a Longfin Fairy Wrasse but I backed off after the Chisel Tooth fiasco.
Thanks for the info! I have such a low success rate with snails I hate to keep buying more. Expensive when my tank is 300 gallons so I need too many of them to battle my long term algae issue lol.My melanurus recently unalived a large nassarius and a large turbo snail... (actually just pulled the shell from the tank earlier this evening). I will gladly replace snails periodically though because that wrasse is my most beautiful, favorite fish.
I also have a pretty small tuxedo urchin but the wrasse has never bothered it.
Thank you I’ll read it!I feel like if you stick with the ones that stay under 5" you'll be good. Or sort by reef safe on LA or similar. Basically on the wrasses mentioned here:
Also this article is awesome and will tell you almost everything there is to know about reef safe wrasses.All About Reef Safe Wrasses in Aquaria
Introduction My name is Hunter and I am a wrasse addict. Admitting such is the first step to buying another wrasse, I think. Wrasses are not only my passion, but my niche in this hobby since 2010. My tank is full of them, and unfortunately...www.reef2reef.com
Anyone have suggestions for reef safe Wrasse that will help with my massive spirorbid worm issue all over rocks and glass lol? It’s driving me nuts!While we have wrasse experts in the room, what do you all recommend for these spirorbid worms? They’re covering my glass and rocks lol. I let it go for some time as I know they’re harmless, but they’re really ugly and probably effecting my Coraline growth and look since they’re covering the rocks lol.
I also wonder if they’re filtering my water too much and competing with my corals lol.
Good point! I also have an urchin. That didn't even cross my mind!I’m also curious what to be aware of when adding wrasses? Do any eat snails like trochus or nassarius snails? One person above mentioned one killing tuxedo urchin. Arrow crab etc. Ouch.
From what I know a sixline would be the most efficient but are notoriously aggressive sometimes. So I'd go with a small halichoeres. Yellow Coris (chrysus), melanarus, radiant (Iridis) or any other that doesn't get too big. But this is just what I've heard haven't used wrasse for pest eating.Anyone have suggestions for reef safe Wrasse that will help with my massive spirorbid worm issue all over rocks and glass lol? It’s driving me nuts!
Thank you. These spirorbid worms are pretty hard shelled little buggers. I wonder if anyone specifically has experience with using wrasses to get rid of them.From what I know a sixline would be the most efficient but are notoriously aggressive sometimes. So I'd go with a small halichoeres. Yellow Coris (chrysus), melanarus, radiant (Iridis) or any other that doesn't get too big. But this is just what I've heard haven't used wrasse for pest eating.
I had a Yellow Coris about 3 months after starting my reef tank. I quickly learned that it was too soon to add fish so quickly but I was excited. A very sweet fish and very fun to watch I would have another one in a minute.From what I know a sixline would be the most efficient but are notoriously aggressive sometimes. So I'd go with a small halichoeres. Yellow Coris (chrysus), melanarus, radiant (Iridis) or any other that doesn't get too big. But this is just what I've heard haven't used wrasse for pest eating.
Sure thing! Snails used to do a pretty darn good job on algae in my smaller tank, but since moving up to a larger one (only 75 gallons so not even close to your 300, lol), the wrasse finally decided to go on the hunt and start helping himself to some escargot. I know he'll keep eating them, and I don't particularly like spending so much on snails either, so I'll probably look into getting a couple small emerald crabs and maybe another urchin or two to help keep the rocks clean. To the lone remaining turbo and handful of nerite snails in my tank... may the odds be ever in your favor.Thanks for the info! I have such a low success rate with snails I hate to keep buying more. Expensive when my tank is 300 gallons so I need too many of them to battle my long term algae issue lol.
Anyone have suggestions for reef safe Wrasse that will help with my massive spirorbid worm issue all over rocks and glass lol? It’s driving me nuts!
Leopards are 50/50 on if they eat pests or not. The Leopard Wrasse that I’ve seen eating pests the most often is Macropharyngodon negrosensis.I bought for utility but it's not doing the function that I was hoping for but I got the leopord wrasse and 70% was for how amazing it looks.