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This
Pajama Cardinal Fish (Sphaeramia nematoptera) shares
a 42 gallon reef aquarium with the White Ribbon eel (Pseudechidna
brummeri). |
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The
author constructed this 4 inch acrylic guard to keep the
White Ribbon eel (Pseudechidna brummeri) from climbing
out of the aquarium. |
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Pictured
is the Blue Ribbon eel (Rhinomuraena quaesita)
in a feeding cage. The store owner is trying to entice
the eel to eel by offering live guppies and a Fire Fish
(Nemateleotris species). |
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This
picture of the White Ribbon eel (Pseudechidna brummeri)
clearly shows the black-pepper markings on the face. |
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The White Ribbon
Eel (Pseudechidna brummeri)
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I've always been
fascinated with ribbon eels of the genus Rhinomuraena.
These are the sleek colorful eels that are commonly found
in the aquarium trade under the names blue, black and yellow
"ribbon eel" (Rhinomuraena quaesita). They are hard
to resist with their bright colors and seemingly menacing
attitudes. Over the years I've purchased these eels on a few
occasions but I've never been able to maintain them successfully.
In fact, I could never even get one to eat in captivity. I
tried everything, including small freshwater livebearers,
grass shrimp, krill, crabs and even live damselfish! The fish
always acted interested and "hungry" but never ate. I suspect
that part of the problem is the method of collection, since
they almost exclusively originate from the Philippines. There
are people that claim to have maintained these ribbon eels
for a period of time, but these are the rare exceptions to
the rule. My suggestion is to avoid these eels until we get
some assurances that they're being collected responsibly and
handled properly along the supply chain.
Having struck
out with the "common" ribbon eels, I turned my attention to
the white ribbon eel (Pseudechidna brummeri). It is
also a "moray eel" belonging to the Family Muraenidae. This
species is equally attractive to me as an aquarist because
of its small maximum size (40 inches) and serpentine appearance.
I didn't have any luck finding one in the aquarium trade until
I stumbled upon one at a local aquarium store. In fact, the
store owner had forgotten about the eel, which had been thrown
into a live rock holding tank six months previously! I assumed
that the eel was healthy and eating in captivity, since it
had been alive for such a long time under somewhat questionable
conditions. I took it home and placed it by itself in a 12
gallon established quarantine tank. Within one day, it was
eating frozen krill from a feeding stick! I had my ribbon
eel at last!
As the name implies,
the white ribbon eel is an overall white in color but has
black pepper-like spots around the face and head. It has a
continuous, relatively tall, dorsal fin that stretches from
the head through the tail. When the fish moves in its distinctive
snake-like pattern, it resembles a "white ribbon," hence the
common name. Similar to other moray eels, the white ribbon
eel lacks scales and produces copious amounts of body slime.
This makes it more difficult for ectoparasites to gain a foothold
and provides some protection against scrapes from the sharp
rocks and sand.
Although not common
in the aquarium trade, the white ribbon eel enjoys widespread
distribution in nature. It's found primarily in lagoonal areas
of coral rubble and sand from the Western Indian Ocean of
East Africa, north to Taiwan and south to Fiji in the South
Pacific.
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The
White Ribbon eel (Pseudechidna brummeri) in the
author's 42 gallon reef aquarium in 2003. |
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The
White Ribbon eel (Pseudechidna brummeri) currently
shares this 42 gallon reef aquarium with a Regal Angelfish
(Pygoplites diacanthus) and Pajama Cardinal Fish
(Sphaeramia nematoptera). |
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The
White Ribbon eel (Pseudechidna brummeri) initially
shared this 42 gallon reef aquarium with a Scopas Tang
(Zebrasoma scopas) and group of PJ Cardinals (Sphaeramia
nematoptera). |
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As far as I know,
there is no food data analysis for the white ribbon eel, but
based upon my experience with it in captivity, it has a predilection
for krill, suggesting that it primarily eats crustaceans.
In fact, this is about the only food that it eats with gusto.
I've gotten it to eat small silversides and pieces of clam
on occasion, but most often it turns its nose up at these
foods. I now keep it in the same 42 gallon reef aquarium with
six Pajama Cardinal fish (Sphaeramia nematoptera),
and they've co-existed for many years. The eel could have
easily picked off these cardinal fish if it wanted to, so
this suggests to me that it's not piscivorous. I also recently
added a small yellow algae blenny (Atrosalarias fuscus)
and the eel ignored this fish as well.
The literature
indicates the white ribbon eel is a loner and the sexes cannot
be distinguished, so I wouldn't recommend mixing more than
one in an aquarium. The maximum length of this eel is listed
at forty-inches, but it attains a circumference of less than
one-inch, so it's not a large eel by moray standards. I have
not noted any differences between juvenile and adult specimens.
Given its relatively
small size and limited activity, the white ribbon eel can
be kept in an aquarium as small as 30 gallons; although I
would recommend that the aquarium length be at least 20 inches.
If you plan to use a substrate, it should be fine calcareous
sand, since the eel often travels along the bottom and may
injure itself on the typical crushed coral substrate. I've
come across references that the white ribbon eel buries itself
in the substrate. In my experience, this is untrue and a sand
substrate is optional. The rest of the aquarium should be
decorated with live reef rock. While this eel isn't strong
enough to displace large rocks, I'd still recommend a stable
and secure rock structure with lots of nooks and crannies.
The white ribbon eel doesn't like to be exposed, except for
its head, and will spend most of the day with its body inside
the rock structure. Since there is the possibility that the
eel will escape the aquarium, I'd suggest either covering
the aquarium or building a lip around the perimeter. I don't
like covering reef aquariums, so I chose to build a four-inch
acrylic guard around the perimeter of the aquarium. This has
proven to work very well and my white ribbon eel has never
left the aquarium. I've seen pet stores keep their eels in
partially filled aquariums. This accomplishes the same goal,
but you lose water volume. I prefer my method.
There are no specific
lighting requirements for the white ribbon eel. I've kept
mine under power compact fluorescent lights as well as 250
watt metal halide lighting and the eel did equally well. My
eel aquariums have always been maintained as reef aquariums
with a specific gravity of 1.025 at an approximate temperature
of 78 degrees Fahrenheit.
Similar to other
moray eels, the white ribbon eel hunts for food primarily
by smell rather than by sight. Although it can be kept in
the typical reef aquarium, it can't compete for food with
typical reef fish. It's important that the eel be individually
fed at least three times a week. I feed my eel by holding
pieces of frozen krill in Eheim tongs. The eel quickly locates
the food and snatches it from the tongs. I usually feed 3
to 4 pieces of krill up to 3 times per week. In order to vary
its diet, you can also try frozen silversides and pieces of
squid, shrimp, and clam. I've found that when my eel is hungry
it will cruise the aquarium. After it's been satiated, it
will return to the rock structure. Live grass shrimp can also
be used to entice a finicky white ribbon eel to begin eating
in captivity. Eels occasionally go on hunger strikes, especially
when they are disturbed or if the water quality is sub-par.
This can last for weeks. Keep offering frozen krill every
other day until it develops an interest in eating again.
The white ribbon
eel can be kept in the same reef aquarium as most reef fish
but may eat small crustaceans. My eel shared an aquarium with
a peppermint shrimp (Lysmata wurdemanni) for almost
a year before the shrimp disappeared, and it has never harassed
the hermit crabs, sea stars or cucumbers that share its tank.
I also have a Regal Angelfish (Pygoplites diacanthus)
and Scopas Tang (Zebrasoma scopas) in the same aquarium
without incident. I'd be concerned about keeping this eel
with trigger fish and large angels (Holacanthus species)
for fear that they will pick on the eel. I also wouldn't put
any larger and more aggressive moray eels in the same aquarium.
When purchasing
a white ribbon eel, look for a specimen that is eating at
the store! This is of primary importance. Also look closely
at the tiny eyes and be sure that they are clear. Although
this eel is not prone to infection by ectoparasites, I'd still
recommend keeping it a quarantine aquarium for 6 to 8 weeks.
This not only helps you deal with potential health issues
outside the main display aquarium, but it gives the eel a
chance to adapt to captive life and prepared foods without
the stress of other fish. I've found that the Eclipse System
12 gallon aquarium makes and excellent quarantine tank. It's
completely enclosed and all the filtration is built in. I
was even able to add a small 25 watt heater into the filtration
chamber, so there was nothing but one siphon tube visible
in the aquarium.
References:
Reef Fishes Volume
1 by Scott W. Michael
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