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Often mistaken for basses or groupers (Family Serranidae), the closely
related Roundheads (Plesiopsidae) include some aquarium favorites. The
diminutive Assessors, available more and more as captive produced
specimens for smaller systems, and the “Comets”; of which
Calliplesiops altivelis is a standard offering. In recent years, if
you can accommodate a specimen starting very small; you can even opt for
a tank-bred individual.
The Marine Betta is an exemplary species for peaceful fish only to
full-blown reef systems, given some care as to picking out tankmates
(not too mean or competitive-feeding wise, or easily snapped up as in
small fish or shrimps). All it really needs is a system of size, some
cover, perhaps live foods to start with, and your patience.
Distribution/Collection: This species is found
spottily in the tropical Indo-Pacific; Red Sea, East Africa to the Line
Islands; almost always hiding within reef structure in forty, fifty feet
of water. Most specimens are collected and shipped out of Fiji (best)
and Indonesia.
Behavior/Compatibility:
Comets will not sample your corals, anemones and other polypoid life,
but will consume small fishes and crustaceans it can fit in its mouth.
Reciprocally, this fish needs to be placed with peaceful fish tankmates;
no rambunctious customers like large basses, triggers, big puffers or
piscivorous morays. Take care similarly to not stock it with too many
more-eager feeders, as a common cause of loss of this fish is
starvation.
Stocking/Selection: Picking out good specimens
of Calliplesiops altivelis is very easy. IF the animal you’re
looking at is taking food it is very likely in good health and ready for
purchase. Honestly, this fish is rock-solid; either dead and dying or
sterlingly healthy.
Only one Comet should be stocked to a system unless it is huge
(hundreds of gallons) and plenty of cover, as this fish does not get
along well with conspecific tankmates.
System: Bigger is as always better, but I
would not even put a small Marine Betta into something less than sixty
gallons, four feet long. They need space to feel comfortable as well as
structure; corals, rockwork stacked to provide caves and crevices to get
out of the light and away from perceived threats.
Subdued lighting is appreciated though the Comet will just hang out in
the dark and shadows if in a reef tank sponsoring photosynthetic life.
Feeding: This fish is carnivorous, mostly
consuming small fishes, crustaceans and worms in the wild. It can at
times be trained onto non-living meaty foods, but you should be able,
willing to offer live if necessary. Ghost shrimp (“gut-loaded”) are
great here; and small livebearers like guppies and mollies. Note that
this is a nocturnal species in the wild that can/will train to come out
more during lights-on hours as it becomes accustomed to your system. At
any length, initially you should feed it during the late evening. Having
a good deal of healthy live rock and a large DSB will help assure that
your Comet has plenty of endogenously produced live food items.
Disease: Calloplesiops is one of the hardiest,
most pathogenic disease-resistant fishes I know; being the last to show
signs of infestation or perish from common parasites like Cryptocaryon.
Likewise it is not sensitive to commonly employed medicine treatments
and modes.
Calliplesiops is not easily mal-affected by copper exposure, or
hyposalinity treatments.
Reproduction: Comets spawn in the darkness of
a cave; laying a sticky mass of a few hundred eggs that is guarded by
the male parent. Eggs hatch out in 5 or 6 days depending on temperature.
Are you interested in trying to breed them? This species is likely (like
their Serranid kin) protogynic synchronous hermaphrodites. Starting as
females, becoming males in time… so procuring two smaller individuals
will likely result in one of each sex.
Marine Bettas have been captive-bred and reared by a few
commercial outfits; as yet it is uneconomical to aquaculture this
species for mass consumption. Oceans Reefs and Aquariums (ORA) does
offer them for sale.
Cloze: The Marine Betta/Comet has got it all;
beauty, swimming grace/presence, disease resistance and doesn’t cost as
much as you might presume. Other than being shy and often requiring live
foods it is a good choice for peaceful fish only, even better in fish
systems with live rock; and reef systems with carefully chosen
tankmates.
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