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Apogon axillaris Axillary-spot cardinalfish

Apogon axillaris is commonly referred to as Axillary-spot cardinalfish. Difficulty in the aquarium: Vanskelig. A aquarium size of at least 500 Liter is recommended. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.


Profilbild Urheber Prof. Dr. Peter Wirtz, Madeira

Apogon axillaris (c) by Prof. Dr. Peter Wirtz


Courtesy of the author Prof. Dr. Peter Wirtz, Madeira . Please visit www.inaturalist.org for more information.

Uploaded by robertbaur.

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lexID:
226 
AphiaID:
241247 
Scientific:
Apogon axillaris 
German:
Kardinalbarsch 
English:
Axillary-spot Cardinalfish 
Category:
Kardinalfisk 
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Chordata (Phylum) > Actinopterygii (Class) > Perciformes (Order) > Apogonidae (Family) > Apogon (Genus) > axillaris (Species) 
Initial determination:
Valenciennes, 1832 
Occurrence:
Ascencion, St. Helena & Tristan da Cunha, East-Atlantic Ocean 
Size:
up to 5.91" (15 cm) 
Temperature:
73.4 °F - 80.6 °F (23°C - 27°C) 
Food:
Brine Shrimps, Flakes, Frozen food (small sorts), Krill, Lobster eggs, Mysis, Zooplankton 
Tank:
109.99 gal (~ 500L)  
Difficulty:
Vanskelig 
Offspring:
None 
Toxicity:
Toxic hazard unknown 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Related species at
Catalog of Life
:
 
More related species
in this lexicon
:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2007-11-16 15:32:49 

Info

Apogon axillaris Valenciennes, 1832
Axillary-spot cardinalfish

Inhabits rocky areas with caves. Smaller specimens occasionally occur among rubble.

Actinopterygii (Strahlenflosser) >
Perciformes (Perch-likes) >
Apogonidae (Cardinalfishes) >
Apogoninae

The term "reef safe" is often used in marine aquaristics, especially when buying a new species people often ask if the new animal is "reef safe".
What exactly does reef safe mean?

To answer this question, you can ask target-oriented questions and inquire in forums, clubs, dealers and with aquarist friends:

- Are there already experiences and keeping reports that assure that the new animal can live in other suitably equipped aquariums without ever having caused problems?

- Is there any experience of invertebrates (crustaceans, hermits, mussels, snails) or corals being attacked by other inhabitants such as fish of the same or a different species?

- Is any information known or expected about a possible change in dietary habits, e.g., from a plant-based diet to a meat-based diet?

- Do the desired animals leave the reef structure "alone", do they constantly change it (boring starfish, digger gobies, parrotfish, triggerfish) and thus disturb or displace other co-inhabitants?

- do new animals tend to get diseases repeatedly and very quickly and can they be treated?

- Do known peaceful animals change their character in the course of their life and become aggressive?

- Can the death of a new animal possibly even lead to the death of the rest of the stock through poisoning (possible with some species of sea cucumbers)?

- Last but not least the keeper of the animals has to be included in the "reef safety", there are actively poisonous, passively poisonous animals, animals that have dangerous biting or stinging weapons, animals with extremely strong nettle poisons, these have to be (er)known and a plan of action should have been made in advance in case of an attack on the aquarist (e.g. telephone numbers of the poison control center, the treating doctor, the tropical institute etc.).
If all questions are evaluated positively in the sense of the animal(s) and the keeper, then one can assume a "reef safety".

External links

  1. FishBase (multi). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.
  2. Prof. Dr. Peter Wirtz auf Medslugs (multi) (Archive.org). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.

Pictures

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Apogon axillaris (c) by Prof. Dr. Peter Wirtz
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