theirs good money to be made on these. My wild caught gold banded maroon pairs have had success on their first batch of eggs whats the next step when they hatch? what should I be feeding it? thanks.
@shazed You have to get them to lay the eggs on a tile or something that you can remove for remote hatching. Otherwise, the newborn larvae just gets eaten or chewed up by the pumps. You feed live rotifers in the remote tank. Very hard to raise without live food. Not a lot of demand for Clarkii. Wish these were Darwin Ocellaris or Onyx Perculas but these very fun to watch and grow.
@Mobert Hi Mobert, thanks for some amazing videos!! How can you keep so many different clown species (and two different anemone species) in the same tank?
Is it because they are all juvenile or a matter of tank size? Would wish I could add more clowns, but from what I can read, they would pair up and become territorial?
@soerenj It is true that you can only put two clowns of the same species in most all tanks. On this video, the clowns are just babies and are the same size so they don't hurt each other. My clowns in the 210 gallon are 5+ years but they were all from the same clutch and raised together. The additional baby clowns are experimental and it is unknown how it will work out as the Clarkii mature. Green and Rose Bubbletips can be together but the Magnifica was isolated on a pillar.Very wet skimming.
nemo nemo
SuperShori 1 month ago
Nice.
willysum 4 months ago
its like syncrownised swiming
clownfish1011 7 months ago
very cool....
MrCobsCorals 10 months ago
awsome!!!
coralfish12g 11 months ago
36 gallon biw front
wbsmietana 1 year ago
Too cute!!!!!
blairfritz 1 year ago
@blairfritz Thank you so much for the comment!
Mobert 1 year ago
theirs good money to be made on these. My wild caught gold banded maroon pairs have had success on their first batch of eggs whats the next step when they hatch? what should I be feeding it? thanks.
shazed 1 year ago
@shazed You have to get them to lay the eggs on a tile or something that you can remove for remote hatching. Otherwise, the newborn larvae just gets eaten or chewed up by the pumps. You feed live rotifers in the remote tank. Very hard to raise without live food. Not a lot of demand for Clarkii. Wish these were Darwin Ocellaris or Onyx Perculas but these very fun to watch and grow.
Mobert 1 year ago
awesome! must be a pain cleaning thattank so often. how much do they go for at the store when you sell them?
FishCollecter 2 years ago
major pain....not enough.
Mobert 2 years ago
I LOVE cklarkii CLownfish!!!
Are u keeping any of these guys?
animalmastermtd 2 years ago
I will keep some of the ones with the blue eyes but most will be sold.
Mobert 2 years ago
@Mobert Hi Mobert, thanks for some amazing videos!! How can you keep so many different clown species (and two different anemone species) in the same tank?
Is it because they are all juvenile or a matter of tank size? Would wish I could add more clowns, but from what I can read, they would pair up and become territorial?
soerenj 1 year ago
@soerenj It is true that you can only put two clowns of the same species in most all tanks. On this video, the clowns are just babies and are the same size so they don't hurt each other. My clowns in the 210 gallon are 5+ years but they were all from the same clutch and raised together. The additional baby clowns are experimental and it is unknown how it will work out as the Clarkii mature. Green and Rose Bubbletips can be together but the Magnifica was isolated on a pillar.Very wet skimming.
Mobert 1 year ago
Very cool Stacy's aunt!!!
badgcoupe 2 years ago
thats awesome :) are you selling them?
papichancho1234 2 years ago
yes, will be selling to local fish stores when they are a bit bigger.
Mobert 2 years ago