Jump to content

about my new fish clown tang.....


Daniel_Duan

Recommended Posts

i bought a small clown tang yesterday. that is about 6cm long. i found some information about the fish from internet. it said that clown tang is very difficult to keep, and they needs much space to swim....my god@!my tank is not big, and i am not a expert. is there any one who kept this kind of fish before?and can you please tell me how to keep my fish?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It will definately needs a larger tank than that, Clown tangs are notoriously agressive, especially to any new addtions to the tank. Generally if you want to keep one, it would be the very last fish you add to your tank. Do you live in ChCh by any chance?

There are several reasons why Clown tangs are considered difficult to keep. First they are often caught with cyanide, meaning they die slowly of cyanide poisoning. And second people do not feed them the correct diet. Like all tangs, they are heavy feeders and require a lot of vegetable material to remain healthy.

If you get these two problems sorted they are not particularly diffucult to keep. But yes, it will require a larger tank. I think a 6 foot tank is minimum for the optimum lifespan of the fish.

Layton

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thank you very much for your suggestion! but i don't want to move every thing to a new larger tank, because that will be much troublesome. maybe i will try to catch the fish and sell it.but hard to catch! i don't know how to deal with the first problem as you said, and about the second problem it is also a dilemma for me, becasue i don't want to the fish grow so fast but the fish is a heavy feeder. do you have any idea about how to catch a tang fish from a reef tank? or should i just leave the fish in my tank and see how it will be?

thank you very much! by the way, i live in Auckland city.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

did you purchase it from a shop?

If you did i would take it back as they should have given you better advice as they are hard to keep and they need a lot of feeding.

actually it would be good to keep them in a small tank so you can fatten them up and clean any excess food.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

yes, i bought it from a shop. but how can i catch the fish which swim so fast?

and there are just two fishes in my tank, one is a samll six line, another is that 6cm long clown tang. do you think it is not a matter to keep the clown tang?

will it die in a short-term? a month?

thank you!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

IT should not have been sold to you as it is a hard fish to keep.,

The only way you are going to catch it is by removing some of your rocks and then try to net it.

Maybe you could ask the shop that sold it to you to come and catch it, since it is their mistake and it should not have been sold to you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

the staff in the shop have told me the fish needs a lot of space to keep, but i said i want to try and they said that it may be ok because the fish is not very big now. so i don't think they should take the responsibility.

and actually i don't want to remove the rocks because it may harm coral( i just rebuild the landscape in my tank).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think that the shops who initially set people up with their first marine tank need to be more proactive about informing their customers about what the limitations of the system they are buying are. They should tell the customer up front that if they get a tank of such and such a size, then they will not be able to keep specific species of fish. Or with this type of lighting you will not be able to keep particular kinds of coral etc.

This means their customer is not left wondering why livestock purchased from their shop keep dying, when in fact they do not have a suitable tank setup to keep it alive.

This of course does not replace the need for the hobbyist to research the animals they wish to keep. But when just starting off, there is not a whole lot of information around, (unless you look around the web) so people tend to take the advice of pet stores as gospel (which is not necessarily the case).

Layton

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What Layton said.

Clown Tangs, like the Sohoal Tang Layton has can be a great addition to a tank, as long as you are ready for it, and big fish are your thing, as they get massive.

Alois had a med clown, not sure if he still has it or not? Very pretty fish.

Pies

Link to comment
Share on other sites

sounds to me like the LFS told him it needs a larger tank but he said hed try it anyway.

just a note, its not all the LFS fault, its not up to them to refuse service, people have to do research before they buy anything, blaming the LFS for this guy being too lazy to research his own fish doesnt seem right to me.

of course better LFS will help customers more than others, but it shouldnt be up to them to 'baby' their customers.

/rant

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't think the shop that sold it to him is a fault really, but my comments above are still relevent. If people know the limitations of a system they are going to purchase, then they should have no reason to be surprised when they find they can't keep a particular animal.

Layton

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pretty much agree. No point in pointing the fault and the shop, ultimatly you you take the time to research your purchases before you buy. We are talking about a live animal, an animal that will be 100% dependant on you to provide it the environment it needs to survive. Its not a trival purchase, but if you treat it as one, you will have these sorts of problems.

fish = good. impulse buying fish = bad

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i wouldnt have really let daniel buy the tang, unless i knew he is

1. plannining on a bigger tank in the near future.

2. possibly leaving the country, in the not so distant future. In which case i will either take it off his hands, rehouse it or buy it back into the shop

For any one interrested the tang has settled in and is doing very well

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...