Mandarin Goby : Care And Requirements Of The Breathtaking Mandarin Dragonet

Add comments

The Mandarin Dragonet (Synchiropus Splendidus) is one of the most stunning fishes ever to reach the hobby. It almost looks like a painting with its blue, orange and green lines and patches all across its body. Despite not being a true goby, the name "mandarin goby" seems to have stuck with this fish. A more accurate name for it is the mandarin dragonet.

The mandarin dragonet is heavily collected from the Indo-Pacific. Despite its popularity, they do very poorly in captivity. I will touch on this later.

As far as temperament goes, they are very peaceful fish. They are only aggressive towards conspecifics such as psychedelic and scooter dragonets. If you're interested in a pair of mandarin dragonets, look for a mandarin with an elongated first spine (a male) and look for one without (a female) and put them together.

These fishes can attain lengths of up to 4 inches. A 30 gallon aquarium has enough space for a single specimen, only if they're accepting prepared foods. They don't eat. Copepods in the wild are all they eat. Therefore, it is my recommendation that the minimum sized tank for these beautiful fish be no less than a well established 75 gallon tank with plenty of copepods. This way, you'd never have to feed them. They will live off available copepod populations without wiping them out.

With some time and a lot of effort, mandarin fish can be trained to accept prepared foods, even pellets.You'll need live adult artemia to accomplish this task. They are receptive to live brine shrimp so getting them to eat it is a task that will take care of itself. Next, you're going to mix in some frozen brine shrimp with the live ones during feeding. Once they begin eating frozen brine shrimp you can breathe a sigh of relief, but its not over yet. We need to slowly get them to accept a more nutritious food like mysis shrimp.

As before, introduce some mysis shrimp with the frozen brine shrimp when you feed them. If you can get them on a frozen mysis shrimp diet, you've completed the task. Expand to other foods like a good pellet and krill.

But wait, there's another problem you will likely face with mandarin dragonets. They are extremely slow eaters. It cannot compete with other tank mates for food, its that slow. There are three ways to solve this problem. You could feed a lot more, thereby ensuring some food will be left for the mandarin and in the process, foul up your tank. Or, you can use a pipette to spot feed your mandarin dragonet. Lastly, you can find a plastic soft drink bottle that has a hole only the mandarin can fit through and put some foods there.

Its up to you to choose one or all of these methods.

About the Author:

Related posts:

  1. Mandarin Goby : Care And Requirements Of The Breathtaking Mandarin Dragonet
  2. The Stunning Mandarin Dragonet : Their Care And Requirements
  3. The Mandarin Goby : A Guide On This Difficult Dragonet
  4. The Maroon Clownfish : Care And Requirements Of The Giant Premnas Biaculeatus
  5. Centropyge Bispinosus : Care and Requirements of the Coral Beauty

Customers Recently Purchased:

Written by Roman Veaila using tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Leave a Reply

*