Love the video man! And I think captive bred fish are definitely the future of any tank! Can't wait for the captive bred Copperband to become even more widely available!
That decides it - I'm getting two ocellaris clownfish and a fairy basslet; thank you so much for making this video. That my future fish are captive bred is very important to me.❤️
I’m from Germany and was lucky to got the chance to buy a Pomacanthus navarchus and a Pygoplites diacanthus as a tank bread version at my lfs☺️ Looking forward for more species as tank bread 💪🏼
I live in the US and I know that we are lucky to have BIOTA, ORA, and more that are huge operations! With captive bred fish they are hardier because they have never known anything but captivity so they are conditioned for aquarium life and a huge plus is that they consume prepared foods which most of us use making it easier to keep a well fed fish and this in return naturally fights off diseases, stress, etc.
Agreed, the scale of captive breeding in the United States is spectacular. Even small shops will breed high quality corals and fish to help meet demand. Down here in FL its rare to see anything wild caught aside from some invasive species pulled from the Everglades in fish shops. Thanks to captive breeding, new genetic patterns and colors are being discovered that are taking away demand for "normal/wild" versions of a species.
Still hoping to get captive bred Chelmon as well as Halichores melanurus in germany. Both are possible to be captive bred. Got a pair of centropyge bispinosa from Biota at a german local store, which are just awesome. No problem with food, which makes it so much easier. So far I will start breeding Doryrhamphus excisus, wish me luck ;)
Lovely vid from you again. And when are you giving the uptade on your water box and your clown fishes Now I see that your tank is cover with 90% of Gorgonions.
Hey, does anyone know how fast a yellow tang grows? Could I buy one for my 250L Tank and keep it there for like 1 year(If I get a small one)? Next Year I wanted to go to 600-800L
Hatte ich sehr lange Zeit immer mit drinnen, nur leider ist das unglaublich viel Arbeit, die dann doch meistens nicht wahrgenommen wurde. Aber gut zu wissen, dass hier Interesse da ist danke ;)
None of the yellow tangs you showed were captive bred. And there is no reef fish that is true algae eater, they are omnivorous, they will digest decomposed vegetal matter, not fresh algae. If they pick on algae is because they are bored, but they won't do such thing as cleaning a tank of algae. Fish can not digest cellulose. The only exception are rabbitfish (under the assumption the still posses the right symbiotic bacteria in their digestive tract), and their diet is macroalgae, not the problematic algae people have in their aquarium. Please, document yourself better before spreading false information. Such a same.
I watch my YT eat GHA all day, seaweed, multiple kinds of macro algae (live "fresh algae"). What's the difference what Yellow Tangs are shown.. the video is meant to list what kind of marine fish are available as captive bred. Sorry but you are being incredibly ridiculous..
This comment is extreme and a little emotional. Yellow tangs certainly eat nuisance algae, it doesn’t matter if they can’t fully digest it, they still consume it. The video never calls tangs herbivores and who cares if none of the tangs are captive bred in the video, he’s just saying what’s available.
Matters if they can digest because otherwise you can assume that your fish has a good diet, and if not they will develop lateral line syndrome, which by the way is the problem that every captive bred Zebrasoma is showing. So it is important not to assume that reef fish eat algae.
@@wjhdrew No, but you don't eat cardboard, do you? And the small amounts of cellulose in your diet won't harm you because you probably have a wide diet, just like reef fish should have.
Love the video man! And I think captive bred fish are definitely the future of any tank! Can't wait for the captive bred Copperband to become even more widely available!
Yesss Thank you Emmanuel! Copperband would be so great!
Ah the most calming channel on TH-cam 😇
Hahaaa Thank you so much for that! :D
Gott sind das göttliche Aufnahmen! 🤩 🤩🤩Danke Tobi! 💪
Vielen Dank Chris, das ehrt mich sehr :D
That decides it - I'm getting two ocellaris clownfish and a fairy basslet; thank you so much for making this video. That my future fish are captive bred is very important to me.❤️
I’m from Germany and was lucky to got the chance to buy a Pomacanthus navarchus and a Pygoplites diacanthus as a tank bread version at my lfs☺️ Looking forward for more species as tank bread 💪🏼
So great Bene!! :D
Great captive bread👍 and some interesting additions to a marine tank for sure Toby. 👍🏴
Thank you John for your great feedback! :D
I love this channel!! keep up the good work my friend! 😀👍👍
Thank you so much Paul! 🙏🙏
I live in the US and I know that we are lucky to have BIOTA, ORA, and more that are huge operations! With captive bred fish they are hardier because they have never known anything but captivity so they are conditioned for aquarium life and a huge plus is that they consume prepared foods which most of us use making it easier to keep a well fed fish and this in return naturally fights off diseases, stress, etc.
Agreed, the scale of captive breeding in the United States is spectacular. Even small shops will breed high quality corals and fish to help meet demand. Down here in FL its rare to see anything wild caught aside from some invasive species pulled from the Everglades in fish shops. Thanks to captive breeding, new genetic patterns and colors are being discovered that are taking away demand for "normal/wild" versions of a species.
Nice Feedback!!
Great video, thank you. A question for you please, your tank behind you, are you using a wavebox, I like that oscillation.
Thank you so much! And yes you are right, this is a nano Tunze Wavebox ;)
Love this!! 💓 Thank you:)
Thanks :D
Love the vid and ur accent nice work!
Thank you so much Carlos :D
Great video as always my friend 😉
Thank you buddy! :)
Super good videos and a very important topic in the saltwater hobby
Thank you so much for that great feedback! :D
Great video! 😍
Danke euch!! :D
Great list!
Thank you so much!
Copperbands... wow!
Would be so great to have some!
Still hoping to get captive bred Chelmon as well as Halichores melanurus in germany. Both are possible to be captive bred. Got a pair of centropyge bispinosa from Biota at a german local store, which are just awesome. No problem with food, which makes it so much easier.
So far I will start breeding Doryrhamphus excisus, wish me luck ;)
Nice Dominic! If you have some of them let me know :D
Great video
Thank you!
Great video. Thank you.
super sir regarding how to breed yellow tangs plz help me
Lovely vid from you again. And when are you giving the uptade on your water box and your clown fishes Now I see that your tank is cover with 90% of Gorgonions.
Thank you so much! Yes I have so many of them haha but I have to say: There will be a new tank this year Akshay 🤫
@@seafriendlyreef Yeah I mean what can I say this year Tobey is coming with some banging reef tanks best of luck for your new project.
Lindo aquario ..sou do Brasil você não acha que as Hqi e t5 são ainda superiores aos leds....
Hey, does anyone know how fast a yellow tang grows? Could I buy one for my 250L Tank and keep it there for like 1 year(If I get a small one)? Next Year I wanted to go to 600-800L
Hmm normally this should not be a problem but also when they are young they swim a lot so in my opinion 250 liter is a little bit to small :/
@@seafriendlyreef ok Ill wait then😅✌
I just uploadedna vid on my captive bred yellow tank you gotta rake a look if u havent seen any captive breds in person theyre not as nice
Könntest du vielleicht deutsche untertitel reinmachen wäre für deine deutschen Zuschauer echt nice 👍
Hatte ich sehr lange Zeit immer mit drinnen, nur leider ist das unglaublich viel Arbeit, die dann doch meistens nicht wahrgenommen wurde. Aber gut zu wissen, dass hier Interesse da ist danke ;)
None of the yellow tangs you showed were captive bred. And there is no reef fish that is true algae eater, they are omnivorous, they will digest decomposed vegetal matter, not fresh algae. If they pick on algae is because they are bored, but they won't do such thing as cleaning a tank of algae. Fish can not digest cellulose. The only exception are rabbitfish (under the assumption the still posses the right symbiotic bacteria in their digestive tract), and their diet is macroalgae, not the problematic algae people have in their aquarium. Please, document yourself better before spreading false information. Such a same.
Humans can’t digest cellulose either tho
I watch my YT eat GHA all day, seaweed, multiple kinds of macro algae (live "fresh algae"). What's the difference what Yellow Tangs are shown.. the video is meant to list what kind of marine fish are available as captive bred. Sorry but you are being incredibly ridiculous..
This comment is extreme and a little emotional. Yellow tangs certainly eat nuisance algae, it doesn’t matter if they can’t fully digest it, they still consume it. The video never calls tangs herbivores and who cares if none of the tangs are captive bred in the video, he’s just saying what’s available.
Matters if they can digest because otherwise you can assume that your fish has a good diet, and if not they will develop lateral line syndrome, which by the way is the problem that every captive bred Zebrasoma is showing. So it is important not to assume that reef fish eat algae.
@@wjhdrew No, but you don't eat cardboard, do you? And the small amounts of cellulose in your diet won't harm you because you probably have a wide diet, just like reef fish should have.