FAQs on Amblygobius Gobies,
Behavior
Related Articles: Genus
Amblygobius Gobies,
Related FAQs: Amblygobius Gobies
1, Amblygobius Gobies 2, & FAQs on:
Amblygobius Identification, Amblygobius Compatibility, Amblygobius Selection, Amblygobius Systems, Amblygobius Feeding, Amblygobius Disease, Amblygobius Reproduction, & True Gobies,
Gobies 2, Goby Identification, Goby Behavior, Goby Selection, Goby Compatibility, Goby Feeding, Goby Systems, Goby Disease, Goby Reproduction, Clown Gobies, Neon Gobies, Genus Coryphopterus Gobies, Mudskippers, Shrimp Gobies, Sifter Gobies,
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Amblygobius phalaena (Valenciennes 1837), the
Banded Goby.
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Dragon Sleeper Goby, cloudy/sandy
water... 5/31/11
Hi there, I bought a dragon sleeper goby today from lfs. I freshwater
dipped him.
<Amblygobius phalaena?>
I have a 180 marine tank with 55 gal sump and a skimmer. He eats very
well. My question is does the dust go away?
<... what dust?>
Me beautiful tank has sand dust everywhere.
<... how did you rinse your substrate before placing?>
I have mushroom coral and its upset. I have way over a 100pounds of
live rock and do not want to pull it out to get him.
<?... to get him?>
I really want this fish to work out. Hopefully things will be better
thanks, Jim
<... Please read, re-read what you've sent here. What is it
you're asking?
Bob Fenner>
Re: Dragon Sleeper Goby 6/1/11
Hi Bob, I have been living on this site for a month now and love it! I
am sorry for the misspelling. My Wife is asleep and not here to correct
me.
<Ahh, do learn to use such tools as "spelling and
grammar", built into your word-processing software Jim. Is to a
large degree how I learned English>
I bought 180 tank that has been set up for three years. It had a few
corals in it, but I got rid of them due to I was worried about the fish
I was getting in the future eating it. The sleeper banded goby
(Amblygobius phalaena) has been sifting through the sand and there sand
blowing all over the tank.
<Is what they do>
The tank has a light cloud to it now. I checked my skimmer and its
working fine. I was just wondering maybe if the sand is dirty and will
be clean once he goes through the whole tank?
<Almost always such incidents do "settle down" with time
(a few weeks)>
The guy I bought the tank from only fed his corals and fish flake food
with no direct feeding to the corals.
<Can often "work" in a large, established setting w/
plenty of life/production on and in substrates>
Hopefully that helps for more info. It also has a blue tang that is
very skinny.
I bought red, green, brown algae, new life spectrum, and krill to
fatten him up.
<Ah, good>
The tang so far has no interest in algae only flake food. Any Ideas to
curing the problem would be great! Thanks, Jim
<Do read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/paracfdgfaqs.htm
Bob Fenner>
Ranford hiding 2/20/06 I put my Ranford goby into my 42
gallon reef tank a month ago and have seen him only twice
since. Once, immediately after we released him into
our tank and then once more about 2 and a half weeks
later. I haven't seen him since then (about
2 weeks ago). Are these fish prone to hide away
for that long? My first thought was that he got sucked
up, or jumped out of the tank (which they aren't prone to
doing) but then I saw him swimming around just fine 2 weeks after
I put him in. I turned my back and poof, he was gone
again. I didn't think Rainford's liked to hide
away. BTW - great website. Ken
Greenwood <<Like most similar bite-sized reef fishes, these
guys actually can be quite shy. Their shyness will be
increased if they are housed with aggressive tankmates (even if
the aggression isn't obvious. Also... the more
hiding places and "bolt holes" they have available, the
more secure they will be to come out into the
open. Best Regards. AdamC.>
Update regarding my Hector's Goby. 1/5/05
Adam, My tank has barely been fallow for 2 weeks after
an ich outbreak and the Hector's goby hasn't eaten in
days and has started to look worse than the picture on the WWM
website showing one that's too thin. So I put him in the
display, since he was not going to survive another 6-8 weeks in
the QT! Hope I don't regret this too much... <I hope so
too. QT for these fishes is difficult since QT
conditions don't provide the security and substrate necessary
for normal feeding behavior.> Since technically my tank is
infested with ich and there is a potential host in there now,
I've decided to not add a second fish. So the 1.5" goby
will have a 72Gallon tank all to himself, until he needs to be
fished out for some reason and the tank has a chance to go fallow
for at least 8 weeks! <The problem with this strategy is that
even without obvious signs of infestation, your little goby
probably will keep enough parasites alive to cause a new outbreak
when more fish are added. This is especially true
since your goby may develop natural immunity which your new
additions will not have.> Do fish need to interact with other
fish to feel more 'comfortable?' Narayan
<Not this one. Some shoaling fish are more secure
in groups, but most are happy or happier alone. Best
Regards. AdamC.>
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