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Fish handling
6/21/19
French Angel Question; moving 6/4/15 New SAIA Video
8/22/13 How to not stress fish in transfer
12/11/09 Flame Head Dottyback or Lyretail Dottyback.
Hippolytid shrimp comp. 9/17/09 re: Flame Head Dottyback or Lyretail
Dottyback 9/17/09 A Simple Fish Trap - 02/23/09 re: Catching (fish) Eric Russell's Way - It Really Works! - 11/30/05 Greetings to you all, thank you for so much patience with all of us. <<Hello Martha>> This query is for Eric R. specifically please, or for someone there who knows what "Eric's way" is in regards to his trapping suggestion. <<Tis I, EricR here…>> I was reading all I could in your FAQ's on Heniochus Butterflies, and came across a reader thanking Eric for his fantastic fish trapping method of using fishing line and a clear 2 liter bottle with food in it to catch a fish. <<Ah, yes>> Eric, can you please share this method with us? <<Mmm, is quite simple…and certainly not an original idea. The design is based on the "minnow traps" you can find/see at most any sporting goods store selling fishing gear. You take a cleaned clear 2-liter plastic soda bottle and cut off the top at the shoulder just before the bottle begins to taper. Invert the top and insert in the body of the bottle and then use a needle to "stitch" it in place with some monofilament fishing line (or simply loop and tie-off the line at 6-8 points around the circumference of the bottle). The clear fishing line is less intrusive/startling to the fish than using string or duct tape to secure the top to the body, and it can also be used to fashion a means of "tilting the bottle upright once a fish enters the trap to further reduce chances of it escaping before you can get it (the trap) out of the water. The inverted bottle top creates a cone that "funnels" the fish in to the trap as it enters to get at the food placed inside, yet once inside, makes escape difficult as the fish must find the small opening it came through to get out. The trap has its limitations as obviously the opening in the neck of the bottle must be made large enough for the fish you wish to capture, but keep in mind the larger the opening the easier for the fish to escape once inside. Once the targeted fish is caught…remove the trap from the tank, snip the fishing line to remove the bottle top, and transfer the fish to another tank or transport vessel>> I've attempted to search the FAQ's for this, but I don't see one specifically from you. I spent 4 hours draining my 350 gallon tank down to the halfway mark, partitioning it off with mesh gates, moving a fantastic rock stack around to net out a bully of a Sailfin Tang just days ago, so this method described has my full attention! <<I see… Another solution I have for removing fishes that can't or won't be trapped is to utilize very light fishing line (2lb-4lb) and a very small (size 22) barbless hook baited with a small piece of table shrimp. I've used this method to remove aggressive Damsels with good success and no lasting damage to the fish…and this method is certainly less damaging than the stress induced by hours/days of chasing with a net>> The Heniochus seems a much more peaceful tank inhabitant, so I'm glad I read here first as Bob advises, or else I never would have seen this 2 liter bottle idea. Do you cut the bottle's top off? <<Indeed>> How far down? <<As explained…but feel free to experiment a bit>> Doesn't the food float out, defeating the trap's purpose? <<No…be sure to place the trap in the tank horizontally>> And what is the fishing line/string for? I'd love to learn this in case I need it in the future. <<Do feel free to write back for further clarification if I've not been clear>> Thanks tons in advance! Martha <<Is a pleasure to share. Eric Russell>> <Eric... you really should make some, take some pix of in progress... and write this up as an article... Perhaps make into part of a pet-fish pitch to present to hobby groups on removing livestock period... Yes. BobF> Catching a fish, harder than I though 4/26/08 I thought
this would be easy.... wrong! I have a 65 gallon saltwater, live rock
etc. My problem is my Longnose Hawkfish. He's not full grown yet
but has taken a dislike to my two Banggai Cardinalfish. I wrote to you
before about this and realize this isn't going to work. My pet
store is willing to take him back and will replace him with another
type. I have two questions....how do I catch him. <Two nets...>
I've tried the two nets at feeding time, not a feeding time, a
plastic tube to get him out of the rocks. With 85 lbs of rock and
number of other fish and corals I have to careful. He is so fast.
I've even fed the fish later at night in dim light, he caught right
now. My Cardinalfish are now staying in a back corner and they have to
be stressed, I know I am. After three days of trying I've run out
of ideas and I don't know how a Hawkfish thinks. Second question, I
would like a yellow tang. I know only or three and they don't
always like others them. I've read about their food etc. My store
has a large one and 3 small, I think I'm better with one small so
they fit in with the other fish that are still young. This may help
some other aquarists as well, but I think my Hawkfish is just unusual.
It's also not a good idea to name them, I feel really badly about
having to give up McGregor. Marilee Derby <There are ways to train a
fish to make it easier to remove, but it may be necessary to drain this
tank, remove the rock... Bob Fenner>
Blue Tang Severely Ill...Strategy Suggestions Needed For Removal Of Tang...Input From a WWM Reader - 05/22/2006 Hey all, I hope I'm not butting in too much here, but I've tried this in numerous tanks and have had great success with it. Unfortunately it might be too late to help save this guys tang, but it might help others in the future. First get a large net and stick it in your tank first thing in the morning before the lights come on when all your fish are still asleep. Leave it there all day and feed as per normal (this is very important....DO NOT MOVE THE NET) I got really lucky one day and had a fish swim right in it during feeding, that made a nice easy catch. The next day get up before your fish do (in other words before the tank lights come on. Turn another light on in the room your fish will start to wake up slowly, not be moving quite as quickly as usual, makes it easier to catch them. I've caught I don't know how many fish this way for people I know: at least 7 of the Zebrasoma species, 2 blue hippo tangs, a dragon wrasse, a red Coris wrasse, a particularly stubborn yellow canary fang blenny, and a terrorizing clown trigger to name some of the more difficult ones I've netted. It's always worked for me, hopefully it'll work for you. <Thank you for the suggestion, Amanda. Will post. James (Salty Dog)> Cheers Amanda Australia Collecting License and fence/barrier
nets 1/17/06 Hi Bob am looking to buy a fish collecting
licenses in Australia what do you think and were can you bye fence nets
etc Hank <Mmm, licenses in the "Land Down Under" are
closely numbered and regulated. Likely you would have to become a
citizen, and either buy into an existing one, or add your name to a
list, lottery to win one if/when same became available. Fence nets can
be made (I used to do this... don't!), or bought from outfits that
make them by machine... Look to the aquaculture industry, magazines...
I used to get mine from Memphis Net & Twine. Bob Fenner> Re: fisher net Hi, I would like to know if the net I have in
my saltwater aq. is safe chemically for Mr.
Fish?
Thank You sandy
from Va. Fishing Nets. Not for aquarium use Hello, I put a fisher net
in to a tank of marine fish for decoration. Then I begin to worry about
the fish. Is the net okay or will it harm the marine fish?
Ty sandy <A fisher net, as in one made, intended for
lifting fishes as in "going fishing"? Most are too coarse for
aquarium use (too rough on the fishes bodies), and the frames are often
made of aluminum, even steel... toxic metals to sea life. Bob
Fenner> |
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