OmegaOmega
Reefing newb
I have two clowns in my tank, a maroon percula and a smaller 'Nemo' brand clown.
At night, the past couple of nights, I've noticed that the maroon will get sucked into the grill for the intake to the filters and just stay there. The first night, of course, I was horrified because I thought it had died, but thought it was odd that none of the crabs had gone toward him.
When I opened the tank to reach in for him he literally jumped OUT of the water and back and under a rock. I, of course on cue, screamed and lacerated my arm yanking it away... I think we can all recall the fear I have toward my tank...
Anyhow, the past few nights, the clown has been doing this - basically getting up against the grill and utilizing the suction/flow to stay put and not move at all.
Is this normal or has anyone else seen this type of behaviour? I've tried to do some reading on 'fish sleeping' but I can't find really anything useful that provides generic specification beyond species 'sleep patterns' and wondered - do fish actually sleep, and if so, what does that mean?
The ocean, at night, doesn't 'turn off' the currents, etc - so how do fish manage to stay away from or deal with nocturnal predators.
He seems healthy otherwise - eats normal during the day, swims around... and this seems more recent - I'm sure I would have noticed beforehand if he had been doing this.
Ideas? Recommendations?
At night, the past couple of nights, I've noticed that the maroon will get sucked into the grill for the intake to the filters and just stay there. The first night, of course, I was horrified because I thought it had died, but thought it was odd that none of the crabs had gone toward him.
When I opened the tank to reach in for him he literally jumped OUT of the water and back and under a rock. I, of course on cue, screamed and lacerated my arm yanking it away... I think we can all recall the fear I have toward my tank...
Anyhow, the past few nights, the clown has been doing this - basically getting up against the grill and utilizing the suction/flow to stay put and not move at all.
Is this normal or has anyone else seen this type of behaviour? I've tried to do some reading on 'fish sleeping' but I can't find really anything useful that provides generic specification beyond species 'sleep patterns' and wondered - do fish actually sleep, and if so, what does that mean?
The ocean, at night, doesn't 'turn off' the currents, etc - so how do fish manage to stay away from or deal with nocturnal predators.
He seems healthy otherwise - eats normal during the day, swims around... and this seems more recent - I'm sure I would have noticed beforehand if he had been doing this.
Ideas? Recommendations?