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View Full Version : Any experience with Blue Jaw Triggerfish in Reef Aquarium?


marti224
07/11/2011, 11:22 AM
I am thinkning about getting a blue jaw triggerfish for my 150 gallon reef aquarium (mostly soft corals), and was wondering if anybody had experince with this fish in a reef tank.

aday2remmbr
07/11/2011, 11:27 AM
it will eat your cleanup crew and most mobile inverts but other than that pretty ideal and peaceful.

xcorallusx
07/11/2011, 11:33 AM
I have a pair in my tank and they havnt touched any shrimp, hermits or snails. It will be fine and I doubt it will eat your inverts if you have any, just feed it regularly.

xcorallusx
07/11/2011, 11:34 AM
They are jumpers so make sure you have a screen top

marti224
07/11/2011, 11:40 AM
cool...thanks for the advice

Amoore311
07/11/2011, 12:06 PM
I had mine in my 180 Reef and he was completely fine with all corals and inverts. They do need large tanks though. 6' long I would recommend as the minimum.

aleonn
07/11/2011, 01:37 PM
BJT's are the most reef-safe of the triggers, but may go after new ornamental shrimp. I had one in my QT tank before one of the RC'ers brought up that they may eat some of my smaller fish. Some people had good luck with mixing BJT's and small fish, but I just didn't want to take the chance.

nivekid
07/11/2011, 01:52 PM
Tagging along. Are they peaceful? Would they bother a mandarin in a 6' 125 Gallon?

TruespeedEM1
07/11/2011, 01:53 PM
I had a BJ male in my tank for awhile and it did perfectly fine. It was actually killed by a Tomini Tang, go figure

Amoore311
07/11/2011, 02:20 PM
My Blue Jaw was with a mandarin, juvenile lyretail anthias, 2 very small clowns, and a dragonface pipe fish..... amongst other larger fish. Again, for reference, this was in a 6' 180 gallon tank.

He paid no attention to any of the fish what so ever.

I will also echo the comment about the "jumping"..... Definitely put a screen top on the tank. I rescued my guy twice from carpet surfing before I wise up and put a screen top over the tank.

marti224
07/11/2011, 04:01 PM
sounds like a great addition to my aquarium. Thanks for the input

boxer385
07/11/2011, 04:13 PM
i have a male and female no problems Sps dominate

Wolverine
07/11/2011, 05:56 PM
Tagging along. Are they peaceful? Would they bother a mandarin in a 6' 125 Gallon?

A 125g isn't really big enough long term. These fish swim a lot, and they need a lot of room.
Usually they'll be peaceful, but you'll occasionally get a more aggressive one, so be prepared to remove it if necessary.

nivekid
07/11/2011, 09:51 PM
A 125g isn't really big enough long term. These fish swim a lot, and they need a lot of room.
Usually they'll be peaceful, but you'll occasionally get a more aggressive one, so be prepared to remove it if necessary.

Isn't a 150 the same length, or sometimes even shorter than the 6' 125g. I thought most 150s are 4'x2'x2'. Some sites list the BJT as good for 75 gallons. Obviously they are in the business of selling fish though.

djze
07/11/2011, 11:18 PM
i have a male blue throat & a pink tale in a 180 mixed reef with all kinds of inverts , pipe fish and lots of small fish never had a problem they are model citizens

Wolverine
07/12/2011, 09:39 AM
Isn't a 150 the same length, or sometimes even shorter than the 6' 125g. I thought most 150s are 4'x2'x2'. Some sites list the BJT as good for 75 gallons. Obviously they are in the business of selling fish though.

Yes, it depends on the dimensions, but I also don't think a 150 is big enough. A 75g is definitely too small if you want to keep this fish for a long time. As you noted, those sites are trying to sell fish; they want to look responsible without overly restricting the potential buying pool.

Amoore311
07/12/2011, 10:02 AM
Rockscape and footprint are very important, not necessarily total gallons.

For instance a larger cubish tank 4' x 2' x 18" for instance could work based on how the rock is used. If you pile the rock along back of the tank the fish isn't going to have nearly enough room to swim.

If that same tank was aquascaped to allow the fish more "3 dimensional" swim space it would more than likely be fine.

deepblue68
07/12/2011, 10:06 AM
never had a problem with mine with inverts or corals.

Wolverine
07/12/2011, 04:37 PM
Rockscape and footprint are very important, not necessarily total gallons.

For instance a larger cubish tank 4' x 2' x 18" for instance could work based on how the rock is used. If you pile the rock along back of the tank the fish isn't going to have nearly enough room to swim.

If that same tank was aquascaped to allow the fish more "3 dimensional" swim space it would more than likely be fine.

In general, yes, the rockscape and dimensions are important. In this particular case, it's still not going to give enough room for that fish.

albano
07/12/2011, 04:42 PM
I have a pair in my tank and they havnt touched any shrimp, hermits or snails. It will be fine and I doubt it will eat your inverts if you have any, just feed it regularly.
+1...same experience with mine...6 months, no problems (450g DT)