Agreed. Lol It’s definitely worth our time on this forum to analyze the lives and habits of our livestock and pass the data on to their benefit.This is one of the best threads I’ve seen this year
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Agreed. Lol It’s definitely worth our time on this forum to analyze the lives and habits of our livestock and pass the data on to their benefit.This is one of the best threads I’ve seen this year
That brilliant invention may drive your other fish crazy. Nice move.my first one ate Mysis and LRS from the water column when I broadcast my tank. It went missing while I was on my honeymoon while I had sitters watching my tank. New one I have now eats clams, salmon, and scallops. But all my fish are aggressive eaters and this CBB is very slow to eat and picks all day. So I made a pipe that’s closed on each end with holes drilled all over it that I stuff with it’s good and let it sit in the tank for a day or two before I replace it.
Interesting, where do you see the differences in this pair?CBB are dimorphic. We can sex them. It is actually fairly easy to pair them.
Female
Male
Pair
This guy died after 10 years. He got a weird neurological condition where he could see the food, but kept missing it with his snout. But 10 years seems fine. I think I had another one many years ago that also lasted about that long. He is eating clams and worms here1. what is your CBB success story?
Not by today's standards...It's actually very easy - the one that uses the lipstick is female..
I would love to see pictures of 10 year old CBB. I am glad to see a reefer from CC, TXI received my CBB from Bluezoo on July 11, 2014, so I am almost at the ten year mark. I will try to take a picture and see if @OrionN can tell me the sex. I did QT this fish, but not treat with copper. More of a observation tank, but did treat for flukes as they are known to come in with parasites. I believe my trick was being able to collect live polychaetes from Padre Island beach to get it feeding. It now eats pellets, nori, and is looking all day for stuff to eat. As stated before, if you can get them over the hump, they are a very hardy fish.
As a side note, I foolishly had a single mushroom coral on a rock that has now taken over my tank. I have to go in at times and start to pull them off with tweezers. My CBB will follow me around the tank and clean up little bits that I miss with the tweezers. One of my favorite fish in the tank.