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11-02-2006, 08:33 AM
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#1 (permalink)
| | Astrea Snail
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Gainesville, FL,Florida
Posts: 68
Karma: 2

| Mandarin Goby How do I know if I have enough pods to support a mandarin. I know that they are sometimes hard to keep. Any advice from you all would be great.
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72 gal bowfront with Megaflow. Coralife superskimmer. Two 250W MH 10,000K. 1 Yellow tang, 1 false perc, 1 royal gramma, Midas Blenny and Three Newly aquired Banggai Cardinalfish. Crocea Clam. Button polyp, starburst, shroom, white bubble coral, Xenia, colt coral, Frog spawn, Montipora Capricornis Coral, Ricordea and a newly aquired Open Brain. Lettuce sea slug. Double star and Linki star. |
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11-02-2006, 09:22 AM
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#2 (permalink)
| | Zoanthid
Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: ontario, canada
Posts: 1,117
Karma: 166
 
| Mandarins are only good in a highly established tank because they only eat copods, most can't be trained to eat prepared foods and they will wipe out a copod population in no time. _________ 20g
25lbs LR
1 hydor koralia
rio nano skimmer FISH: blk/white clown, damsel, yellow watchman goby CORAL: grn open brain, acan, torch, rics, toadstool, zoo's
INVERT:[/u] hermits, nassarius, astrea, turbo's, nerites, crocea clam
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11-02-2006, 10:30 AM
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#3 (permalink)
| | Ritteri Anemone
Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Naperville IL Age: 29
Posts: 619
| I guess my question would be how long have you had the tank setup and do you have a fuge? I found that after I added my fuge and it got established the never ending food supply has made my mandarine goby fat.
Also if you look at the tank at night with a red flahlight you should be able to see them crawling all over the rocks.
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180 Gal Reef, AquaC EV-400, 3 MH Aquamedic Oceanlight HQI's 250w 20k. Neptune AquaController III, AquaLogic Trimline Cyclone 1/3hp skimmer, 2 x hydor #4's, 2 x mj1200's modded, 40 gal fuge. |
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11-02-2006, 11:44 AM
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#4 (permalink)
| | Scooter Blennie
Join Date: Sep 2005 Age: 26
Posts: 1,200
| I think every newly setup tank will have enough because pods spawn incredibly fast.
I have had my mandarin for over 6+ months and he is healthier than ever. The key is to have as much rock as possible in your tank, and no fuge is required to keep them. In the long term, mandarins will adjust to what you feed the tank too. I've noticed that after a couple of months of being in my tank, my mandarin started getting curious on what I was feeding the tank. And he use to be those mandarins that wanted pods and pods only! So if my mandarin was trained to eat prepared foods, I think all of them are capable. I feed my corals twice a week, so the mandarin is constantly offered these foods.
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30g reef tank, CPR CY192 filter w/ DIY plumb running Rio 17HF return, Coralife 3x 9w UV Sterilizer, 3 24W T5-Helios 10K Daylights/3 24W T5-Helios Blue lights, 2 Logysis blue meteor light strobes (moonlights/24 Blue LEDs).
Tiger tail cuke, asst. snails/hermits, asst. feathers, rainbow acan,zoos,shrooms,bubble,galaxea, asst. shrimp, 2 ocellaris,mandarin,zebrasoma xanthurum,pink-spot watchman,red-striped pistol. |
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11-02-2006, 12:09 PM
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#5 (permalink)
| | Spanish Shawl Nudibranch
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 77
Karma: 3

| jtreef is right it is base on how long ur tank has been setup, usually people recommend 6+ months of and an establish tank with alot LR. it would help tremendously if u have refugium, that will make sure there will be plenty of food for it. so good luck |
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11-02-2006, 01:04 PM
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#7 (permalink)
| | Ritteri Anemone
Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Naperville IL Age: 29
Posts: 619
| I just have seen to many of these starve in new tanks.
Another trick I learned is to make a nice little rock rubble pile(I did this before the fuge) Hide it under or behind your current aquascaping. This way the goby or other fish such as a wrasse won't deplete the supply, plus then they have a nice place to keep reproducing to feed your Mandarin. |
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11-02-2006, 01:08 PM
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#8 (permalink)
| | 3reef Moderator
Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Wethersfield, CT Age: 38
Posts: 6,122
| I have seen many starve in established tanks as well, particularly in mine!  I've tried about 4 times with different types of dragonettes with the same results. I won't try keeping them again as they require far too much attention than I'm willing to provide to any fish. |
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11-02-2006, 04:29 PM
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#9 (permalink)
| | Astrea Snail
Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Gainesville, FL,Florida
Posts: 68
Karma: 2

| Thanks all for your input. I have had my tank up for about a year and 3 months. No fuge, but I do have a whisper HOB filter with some sand and rock. And I have thrown some pods in there that I got out of my filter. |
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11-02-2006, 11:21 PM
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#10 (permalink)
| | Scooter Blennie
Join Date: Sep 2005 Age: 26
Posts: 1,200
| Just give your tank enough chance to build the population up (when you start seeing them on the glass). And keep your tank with plenty of rock with a lot of hiding places. Trust me, I've kept my little guy for almost a year. |
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