csababubbles
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2007
- Messages
- 661
I have a pair of bangaii cardinals in one of my reef tanks. Started with 3 but the third one disappeared while I was away on a 3 week vacation. I should have moved him to another tank when I saw he started hiding in the corner but like a schmuck I didn't before I went away.
Anyways these two are obviously a pair. I was thinking about moving them to a 220 gallon tank in the future. In a tank that large, would there be any chance of them spawning and having the fry survive without any intervention on my behalf? Or is this process a dedicated feat that requires quite a bit more attention. I read that sometimes the male may swallow the eggs that are held in his mouth sometime. Other times they will hatch but the mom and pop will try and eat them, or other fish will eat them. But in a tank as large as a 220 with lots of live rock hiding places, is there any chance some will survive and grow up? And if they do grow up, will the parents fight with them or will they be accepted as part of the family and coexist?
Also I have several long spined black sea urchins. The adults like to hang out between the spines. Will these urchins help the young fry survive from being eaten by fish tankmates?
Anyways these two are obviously a pair. I was thinking about moving them to a 220 gallon tank in the future. In a tank that large, would there be any chance of them spawning and having the fry survive without any intervention on my behalf? Or is this process a dedicated feat that requires quite a bit more attention. I read that sometimes the male may swallow the eggs that are held in his mouth sometime. Other times they will hatch but the mom and pop will try and eat them, or other fish will eat them. But in a tank as large as a 220 with lots of live rock hiding places, is there any chance some will survive and grow up? And if they do grow up, will the parents fight with them or will they be accepted as part of the family and coexist?
Also I have several long spined black sea urchins. The adults like to hang out between the spines. Will these urchins help the young fry survive from being eaten by fish tankmates?