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OMG! Look at these hybrids and rare fishes!


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  • Senior Reefer

From iwarna's latest blueharbor shipment.

Meiacanthus kamoharai - the only one outside japan currently.

Valenciennea bellae - a lovely sand sifter goby that shared the same fate as kamoharai, but is now slowly spreading to the states and other parts of the world. the care level of this species is a hit and miss, and can be difficult initially.

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  • Senior Reefer

I could do with a kamoharai myself, I think they look unique

they are unique. most meiacanthus are striped or plain, but kamohara is totally black with silvery spots and a single stripe.

but they are very hard to come by outside of japan. this one was a favour from koji after repeated pestering. you would have more luck catching one for yourself in japan.

here's a video of one making a glass bottle its home.

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Rare meiacanthus procne!

a screenshot of one swimming in Fiji. the only live video/picture of one.

Beautiful! Somehow reminds me of pseudocoris aquelis.

There are too many rare meiacanthus unavailable to the trade.

The one that captivates me the most will still be the deepest Meiacanthus Erdmanni! This blenny is found at over 200ft in Cenderawasih Bay. Why does a blenny need to stay so deep? This fish needs a private interview!

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  • Senior Reefer

Beautiful! Somehow reminds me of pseudocoris aquelis.

There are too many rare meiacanthus unavailable to the trade.

The one that captivates me the most will still be the deepest Meiacanthus Erdmanni! This blenny is found at over 200ft in Cenderawasih Bay. Why does a blenny need to stay so deep? This fish needs a private interview!

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another stripey rare Meiacanthus is M. cyanopterus.

i like both of them, and they have long ventral fins. interesting

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  • Senior Reefer

A semi-rare Meiacanthus that we will not likely to see soon.

I have kept one before from CF tonga shipment but it refused to eat and died. M. togaensis, found in Fiji and Tonga.

i spoke to matthew pederson about my kamohara's reluctance to eat, and he said that wild meiacanthus are actually not as easy as we think and can be very picky. captive breeding has made this genus more easy than it actually appears.

digi, like your reticulatus, my kamohara probably needs time before it learns to eat other food besides fish eggs. my old togaensis also never ate and died.

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New shipment of Pseudojuloides Sp. in Japan!

Only one piece this time from Marshall Island shipment. In the picture you can see other marshall fishes like traceyi damsel and a small neopercularis hog.

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