vetteguy53081
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There has been a lot of controversy with lionfish and lionfish invasion in various waters, lions being a bad pet or poisonous devil as examples. Once upon a time, they were so cool to own, a focal point in a given aquarium and the desired centerpiece. There was no more joy than having company over and having them experience a lionfish gulping a molly or other feeder.
Suddenly, few want them or fear them.
Florida has banned them already due to their threat in their waters as they are consuming endangered species such as grunts, groupers, lobsters and shrimps and their invasion and hunting abilities. These fish can in the aquarium be gracious and come in many forms such as radiate, dwarf, volitan, Fu Manchu, Dwarf, fuzzy. Once eating, they adapt easily to a tank and are eye catching . They have also managed to stay low in pricing unlike price increases for other fish. They all display wide and attractive finnage, a mopey and curious look on their faces and their rows of colorful spines, BUT also pack a painful sting, given the group name - Scorpion ! Most stings occur during tank cleaning or working on the aquascaping. My sting experience has been during netting at my LFS and forgetting the fish is in the tank. I even got stung when netting one.
Feeding is one of the challenges as many aquarists resort to live feeders which are the worse choice because its easy for the owner to drop a live feeder than to train their lion to eat. The foods offered must look alive for the lion to accept it at first. Tongs are a great tool to wave a silverside, shrimp or similar in front of them, after all lions are not the smartest fish in water. Grass shrimp and small fiddler crabs will entice them and safe to feed. I used an air line tube and attached frozen fish moving it around the tank and the lion eventually attacked it.
The other issue with having a lionfish is compatible tank mates. A lion will sooner or later attempt to swallow a fish that fits and doesn't fit in its mouth and use its spines to paralyze what it wants to eat.
Do you or have you own(ed) a lionfish?
Have you considered one in the future?
What prevents you from wanting a lionfish?
Pics welcomed!
I had two volitan lions in a 125g and they took up a lot of space, stole food from other tankmates and I got bored with them over time
Suddenly, few want them or fear them.
Florida has banned them already due to their threat in their waters as they are consuming endangered species such as grunts, groupers, lobsters and shrimps and their invasion and hunting abilities. These fish can in the aquarium be gracious and come in many forms such as radiate, dwarf, volitan, Fu Manchu, Dwarf, fuzzy. Once eating, they adapt easily to a tank and are eye catching . They have also managed to stay low in pricing unlike price increases for other fish. They all display wide and attractive finnage, a mopey and curious look on their faces and their rows of colorful spines, BUT also pack a painful sting, given the group name - Scorpion ! Most stings occur during tank cleaning or working on the aquascaping. My sting experience has been during netting at my LFS and forgetting the fish is in the tank. I even got stung when netting one.
Feeding is one of the challenges as many aquarists resort to live feeders which are the worse choice because its easy for the owner to drop a live feeder than to train their lion to eat. The foods offered must look alive for the lion to accept it at first. Tongs are a great tool to wave a silverside, shrimp or similar in front of them, after all lions are not the smartest fish in water. Grass shrimp and small fiddler crabs will entice them and safe to feed. I used an air line tube and attached frozen fish moving it around the tank and the lion eventually attacked it.
The other issue with having a lionfish is compatible tank mates. A lion will sooner or later attempt to swallow a fish that fits and doesn't fit in its mouth and use its spines to paralyze what it wants to eat.
Do you or have you own(ed) a lionfish?
Have you considered one in the future?
What prevents you from wanting a lionfish?
Pics welcomed!
I had two volitan lions in a 125g and they took up a lot of space, stole food from other tankmates and I got bored with them over time