Saltwater fish are the centerpiece of the marine aquarium hobby. Unlike freshwater, where the species mix is dominated by aquaculture, the saltwater trade is still 60-70% wild-caught from Indo-Pacific reefs - though that ratio is shifting as captive-breeding programs scale. Fast Aquatics catalogs 117 saltwater fish species across the major hobby families: clownfish, tangs, wrasses, dwarf and large angels, butterflyfish, gobies, blennies, anthias, damsels, basslets, hawkfish, triggers, dottybacks, eels, lionfish, and pipefish/seahorses.
The defining factor in saltwater fish keeping is parameter stability. A drop of 0.2 in pH or 2 degrees in temperature stresses marine fish far more than freshwater equivalents - the buffering capacity of the ocean has trained these species to expect rock-steady chemistry. Stable beats perfect: a tank that reads 79°F and pH 8.2 every single day is better than one that reads 78-82°F and pH 8.0-8.4 daily.
Beginners should start with captive-bred clownfish (ocellaris, percula), captive-bred dottybacks, royal grammas, firefish, and certain blennies. These tolerate the parameter swings of new tanks and accept prepared food immediately. Reserve sensitive species (anthias, mandarins, dragonets, harlequin tuskfish, copperband butterflyfish) for established systems with 12+ months of stable operation.
Captive-bred ocellaris clownfish. They tolerate a wide range of parameters, accept prepared food immediately, are disease-resistant, and pair-bond reliably without specialized intervention.
A minimum of 4-6 weeks, ideally with established live rock that's been holding nitrates at 0 for at least two consecutive weeks. Adding fish before the cycle completes is the #1 cause of new-tank fish loss.
Yes. A 4-6 week quarantine in a separate tank with prophylactic copper treatment prevents 95% of disease introductions. Marine ich and velvet are devastating in display tanks (76+ days fishless to clear).