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Amongst one of the largest families of fishes, the Labridae have some 517 and counting described species; ranging from less than an inch to more than 90 inches in length; there is really a Labrid for most any type and size saltwater system. What is germinal to matching them with your tank is understanding likely compatibility with your other livestock AND the likelihood of given species, specimens adapting to your captive conditions. Here I’m presenting a brief introduction to some of the better choices in terms of historical survivability of some of the seventy genera by aquarists, how to go about selecting better specimens, and what sorts of settings are best for these choices.
For Easy-going Reef Systems:
For Medium Fish Only to FOWLR Systems:
There are several, meaning “many” from Middle English, of Wrasse genera
suitable for stocking in FO and FOWLR systems that lack super-aggressive
tankmates. Amongst these are some of my faves in the genera Halichoeres,
smaller Hogfishes of the genus Bodianus, and some Thalassoma species.
These choices too should be amongst the last fishes you stock; giving
your system time to mature, produce some native food organisms in and
amongst the live rock, substrate for them to hunt and consume. Most
species of Thalassoma are better stocked one individual per tank; the
Halichoeres and Thalassoma one male to a system; with the option of
placing non-males left up to you if there’s room.
For Rough & Tumble Systems:
Here you can put in a bunch of the larger, more aggressive Wrasses; and
there’s quite a wide range of possibilities. Standards include the two
species of Bird Wrasses, genus Gomphosus, the smaller Maori or Splendid
Wrasses, genera Cheilinus and Oxycheilinus, larger Hogfishes (Bodianus
and Lachnolaimus), Coris Wrasses, the Rock Mover Razorfish (Novaculichthys
taeniourus ), and Tuskfish, genus Choerodon. These species are best
displayed one specimen per species to a tank, and are fine with larger
Basses, bigger Angels and Puffers, the usual more-community Triggers…
Wrasses to Avoid:
Unfortunately there are many species, whole genera of Labrids which
don’t do well in captivity. For whatever reasons; damage from
collection, shipping, handling… something missing in foods; perhaps just
being hard-wired (genetically pre-disposed) to living in larger, natural
conditions, these fishes almost always die within a few days to weeks of
capture. Beware of the Leopard Wrasses, genus Macropharyngodon, the
touchy Tamarins, genus Anampses, Cleaners of the genus Labroides and
more. Look before you leap, purchase Wrasses.
Cloze:
You should know more regarding these fishes before undertaking their
purchase… Such as they are tremendous jumpers… leaving tanks to become
“floor jerky” way too often. Some need rather deep fine sand beds (or
trays of such) to dig in, dive in to escape/feel safe, and sleep at
night. Many of the larger species can and will consume motile
invertebrates like snails, shrimps, hermit crabs… Not to worry; all this
pertinent information can be easily found in books, magazines and valid
internet references. Do research and provide appropriate habitats, plan
on foods, feeding of use, ahead of Labrid acquisition. |
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