I was wondering if anyone can tell me about their experience with a sleeper gold head goby. I am looking to put one in my 32 gal bio cube. Thanks!
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I work at my LFS, they are really common but pretty cool. I think one would work in your 32 gallon, as long as there aren't too many other bottom dwelling fish, otherwise there might be some aggression. Most will eat frozen food but occasionally there's one that will only eat whatever bugs it finds in the sand, so make sure there's a good sized sand bed for it to sift through.I was wondering if anyone can tell me about their experience with a sleeper gold head goby. I am looking to put one in my 32 gal bio cube. Thanks!
okay... both the trigger and gramma sleep in the rocks but there is ample space for him to make a little room for himself. Is there any way to tell the amount of pods i have in my sand bed? I have never added any copepods (or anything like such into the tank.I work at my LFS, they are really common but pretty cool. I think one would work in your 32 gallon, as long as there aren't too many other bottom dwelling fish, otherwise there might be some aggression. Most will eat frozen food but occasionally there's one that will only eat whatever bugs it finds in the sand, so make sure there's a good sized sand bed for it to sift through.
could you tell me what fish you have? A trigger in a 32 gallon is a big no no unless its a juvenile and its in there very brieflyokay... both the trigger and gramma sleep in the rocks but there is ample space for him to make a little room for himself. Is there any way to tell the amount of pods i have in my sand bed? I have never added any copepods (or anything like such into the tank.
I wouldnt be too worried about your pod population, 99% of the sleeper gobies will eat frozen foodcould you tell me what fish you have? A trigger in a 32 gallon is a big no no unless its a juvenile and its in there very briefly
niger trigger, bicolor gramma, two clowns and an arceye hawkfish. The trigger is very young and still is only 2-2.5 inches big. Ive had him for roughly 6 months and am expecting to have to rehome him in a few monthscould you tell me what fish you have? A trigger in a 32 gallon is a big no no unless its a juvenile and its in there very briefly
okay thank you... 60% of the forms i have read complained that they starved to death bc they wouldn't eat any frozen food.I wouldnt be too worried about your pod population, 99% of the sleeper gobies will eat frozen food
Will do about. the trigger... do you have any suggestions on how to find a new home for him? also the hawkeye stays on top of my live rock (at the highest point or on the powerheads not really on the bottom so im not too worried about him. My biggest concern was the goby not eating and starving.Okay, make sure you rehomed him soon otherwise it might stunt his growth, also an arc eye Hawkfish gets pretty big too, and its mostly a bottom dweller, which means it's likely to fight with the sleeper goby. I actually would trade in the arc eye for a smaller Hawkfish species before adding the sleeper goby, try a flame or pixy hawk instead.
For the trigger, you could trade him in to most local fish stores for credit. Not every store will do this, but most will. Also I'd still consider switching to a smaller hawkfish as the arc eyes are better in a 50+ gallon tank IMO. You should be fine feeding the sleeper goby.Will do about. the trigger... do you have any suggestions on how to find a new home for him? also the hawkeye stays on top of my live rock (at the highest point or on the powerheads not really on the bottom so im not too worried about him. My biggest concern was the goby not eating and starving.
Okay thank you for all your helpFor the trigger, you could trade him in to most local fish stores for credit. Not every store will do this, but most will. Also I'd still consider switching to a smaller hawkfish as the arc eyes are better in a 50+ gallon tank IMO. You should be fine feeding the sleeper goby.
Ok thank youI have one in my DT and it will not eat any frozen or dry food. It only eats what is gets by sifting the sand. Luckily my DT is 500G and has plenty of sand but I can see this fish starving in a small tank like yours. So please make sure that the fish eats frozen food before you buy the fish else you will be starving it to death since 32G doesn't have enough sand for this fish to thrive. Also this fish gets big, mine is about 4-5" long.
Wow Looks gorgeousI have one and he made a nice den under one of my live rocks. Stays there most of the day until it’s feeding time. Keeps the sand bed clean with the help of my cuc. Definitely would want to have a cover as they’re known to make a grand exit
I might be a little late but I have a Sleeper Banded Goby and they have big personalities. One thing though is they are sand sifters and get sand every where including rocks and corals.I was wondering if anyone can tell me about their experience with a sleeper gold head goby. I am looking to put one in my 32 gal bio cube. Thanks!