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Andrea
Elijah7048
Is there a connection?
Jade
The problem arises when the adjustable ones (farm ones also happen). Their compass is off! They chose the angle - "it's shorter this way, you're NOT an angle, but an ACTINIA! and we will live in you," better to hope for adaptation to the new environment... otherwise, they will continue to live in the corner.
Andrea9320
Oleg Vladimirovich, I had such thoughts. In theory, they have never seen stones in their lives. And now they look at them as something exotic, from which one should keep a distance.
***
And if a lively fish appears in the aquarium that will cause some discomfort to the clowns and force them to seek refuge? Maybe they could introduce a chrysopterus there, for example?
Curtis9143
I had 2 clownfish in 130 liters - they swam all over the aquarium. I put them in 600 liters - they sat in the corner and rarely came out.
Brooke3987
It might actually work really well! I've seen it happen multiple times when you introduce 1-2 bolder fish to a very timid fish that has been hiding in the rocks for weeks, and it starts swimming confidently after them. Give it a try, it might just work!
Christopher
Ideally, my clownfish have not only never seen stones but have also never been in the aquarium together. So I will try to mix up their company with someone else. Then I will wait... later, if nothing helps, I will have to give someone away to good hands. Either I will have to replace the bubble with a crisp, or I will have to give away the clowns themselves and get other clowns, but for example, clarkii. They seem to be able to live in any type of aquarium, even a bubble one. But here’s the dilemma. I like perculas more than clarkii. But it’s easier to catch them than to make the bubble detach from the rock.
Adam4310
And how did it end? Did they float up? Or did they swim away to another water?
Martin3206
returned to 130.