Saltwater fish of the family Trinidae
Fish from the family Trinidae live in intertidal areas on rocks or coral reefs. Their bodies are elongated and their eyes are close to the top of their heads. The corners of the mouth are raised, and the beauty is smiling, and it also moves in a jumping manner. However, the body of the bream is slightly flattened, and it has only one dorsal fin, and some species also have a head crest. Most dolphins have no scales, probably only deformed scales. The longest length of the family is 54cm, generally less than 15cm. They are generally not large, only about seven or eight centimeters.
1. Spotted bream
< p style="text-indent:2em;">The body is full of straight stripes, or it can be said that yellow and red-brown pens are directly substituted. It is very suitable for living in aquariums and suitable for maintenance by both amateurs and experts.Keep in a 150 liter or larger aquarium, providing rocks and plenty of room for movement. In addition to being aggressive towards fish of similar shapes and sizes, it is generally very gentle in nature. It is best to keep them alone unless they are kept in a large enough aquarium or in pairs. It likes to jump up and down on rocks to find microalgae to eat. It is said that it will eat small polyps, hard corals and shellfish. It will be easy to keep in an aquarium with enough microalgae. If there is insufficient food, you can add some plant food.Two, Vanuatu gobies
Also called red-striped goby or red-spotted goby. Male fish are often larger than females, and their expressions change when they are in heat. It needs to be kept in an aquarium of more than 200 liters in a good environment and provided with sufficient rocks for it to feed and hide. Live rocks with microalgae are the best choice. Unlike other catfish, it can also be fed a variety of chopped meat foods, such as shellfish, shrimp and frozen food, as well as microalgae and blue-green algae. If you want to keep a few more in the same tank, put them in the tank at the same time. Otherwise, arguments can easily break out between them.
3. Australian phoenix bream
Australian phoenix bream
The body is dark brown with white freckles, and the pectoral fins and tail fins are yellow.An aquarium of 150 liters or more, which provides sufficient movement space and rocks will be a good place to raise this fish. Very gentle, except for fish of a similar size. It is best to keep it alone unless the tank legs are large enough or a pair. It likes to feed on microalgae on rocks. If the tank is in good condition, the algae in the tank will generally meet its needs. If necessary, you may wish to add some plant food, such as spirulina, seaweed, etc.
Four. Golden Turtle
She is very beautiful, with a golden body, a blue rim on her mouth, and bright blue rims on her eyes. They swim like eels.Keep them in an aquarium of 150 liters or more and provide enough rocks for them to rest on. There are occasional disturbances of filter-feeding fish and gobies. You may want to keep more in large aquariums. You can provide various animal feeds, such as chopped shellfish, mysid shrimps and nutrient-rich sea shrimps, plant feeds, microalgae and spirulina.
Five. Colorful shrimp and tiger
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Colored goby
Also called bicolor ancientB, orange tail Ancient B. There is no need for two-color wormwood or two-color wormwood. It is named this way because the front half of the fish's body is blue to dark brown, and the back half is dark orange. Male fish are often larger than female fish, and their color changes. During the growth period, they will appear blue. It likes to rest in rock cracks or at the bottom of rocks. The bicolor bream needs a 150-liter aquarium with separate rocks for it to rest and take shelter. There are different opinions on whether the bicolor bream will be aggressive to invertebrates in the tank. Some people think that it is aggressive to fish such as gobies and tigers, while some people do not think so. Some people think it is friendly to invertebrates, others think it eats them. The best way is to carefully inspect it when it first enters the tank to see if it has any aggressive behavior. This may be related to the individual. Food includes plant-based bait, including frozen and dried blue-green algae. Help control overgrown algae in your aquarium.
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