Lyre Tail Grouper (Asia Pacific)
Groupers are large fish that make incredible display animals in the right aquarium. They get along well with other large-bodied fishes as long as they don't enter its cave, but will greedily swallow whole any small or slender fish as well as shrimp and crabs. They do not harm corals, but may knock over small decor with their strong tails. They are best kept singly in all but the largest of aquaria, and then they should be of different species and added at the same time. Each grouper will require at least one large cave to call its own. It may spend most of its time there, especially when newly introduced. In time they may become real pets and recognize their owner.
Groupers are slow moving ambush predators that feed by sucking in their food whole into their enormous mouths. They are carnivores and should be fed at least once every two or three days a high quality diet of krill, silversides and chopped seafood. They are heavy feeders and thus strong filtration is necessary.
The Lyre Tail grouper is an awesome fish, and as its name suggests mature fish have a strongly pointed tail. All its fins have an attractive bright yellow edge. It is also called the Caramel cod after its warm, rusty colored body. Countless white polka-dots cover it from nose to tail, and a thick white stripe runs down its nose. Juveniles are creamy rose colored with a white belly and a dark stripe down their middle, ending in an eyespot at the tail. Its eyes are bright red, and its spots may shimmer lavender under the right light. It is one of the most outgoing of all the groupers, spending most of its time out in the open. It grows to 32 inches; we recommend an aquarium of at least 300 gallons.