fatoldsun
NJRC Member
I gambled with a “reef safe with caution” Singapore Angel and well, I think I lost… sadly. I have/had some zoa frags that I added about 2 months ago. The Singapore Angel that I got back in the summer has been living in a QT setup awaiting the chance to move up to the display. It was there a while since the fish came as a package and there was allegedly ich in the group. I put them through a full 4 week hypo salinity treatment and then 3-4 weeks to bring the salinity up and observe. Everything looked good so I began moving some fish into the DT and rehomed some. The last to go into the DT was the Singapore. The tank is a 90g with a 40g sump/fuge. In it prior to the new additions were a maroon/gold-stripe clown about 4” and a yellow tang about 3.5”. Also there are 2 RBTAs (1 that split). Coral consists of to zoa frags (whacky or whamin’ watermelons, green apples, and small green something or others….) a small rock with 4 heads of green metallic palys and a 40-50 polyp green hammer. Fish added were a blue hippo tang <2” and a tomini tang 1.5” and the Singapore at about 2” The tangs were in and settled and all water params were stable before adding the Singapore. After adding the Singapore, by the next morning the watermelon zoas were closed up – nothing looked beaten up but they were closing. They still are after 3 days. The green something or others are staring to close now too. I have been overfeeding the tank in the hopes to draw the Singapore away from harassing the zoas and for what it’s worth, I haven’t seen it go anywhere near them. I’ve watched as much as I could when I’ve been home (before lights out) Also, it has gone for food every time I’ve fed the tank. So, question is, could the bioload increase have bothered the zoas and caused them to close or could they be closed because the Singapore is harassing them when I’ve been away? Would the harassment be persistent or intermittent? In other words, would it be one peck and the zoas would go into hiding? Or would they stay open in the right conditions to their own demise?
What I’m getting at is did the bioload addition cause them to close, or could the Singapore addition cause them to become defensive or are they closed because they’ve been attacked?
Assuming it’s the latter, could the Singapore be re-trained or outgrow the tendency? Could an abundance of coral overwhelm the Singapore and win? I think I’m stuck with the Singapore because the wife and kids have taken a liking to the fish and have named it General Tso. I never intended to take the Singapore – the guy had a coral beauty and the plan was for that and the hippo only but the conditions were bad and he asd lost the coral beauty and a few others so I took all that he had with the hopes of getting them all back to health and keeping only a few and re-homing the others.
Here’s a short video - not great quality but it is something to look at
http://i1231.photobucket.com/albums/ee503/dzipin/1152a1ce.mp4
What I’m getting at is did the bioload addition cause them to close, or could the Singapore addition cause them to become defensive or are they closed because they’ve been attacked?
Assuming it’s the latter, could the Singapore be re-trained or outgrow the tendency? Could an abundance of coral overwhelm the Singapore and win? I think I’m stuck with the Singapore because the wife and kids have taken a liking to the fish and have named it General Tso. I never intended to take the Singapore – the guy had a coral beauty and the plan was for that and the hippo only but the conditions were bad and he asd lost the coral beauty and a few others so I took all that he had with the hopes of getting them all back to health and keeping only a few and re-homing the others.
Here’s a short video - not great quality but it is something to look at
http://i1231.photobucket.com/albums/ee503/dzipin/1152a1ce.mp4