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#1
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Hi all. . . .
I desperately need help with my 7 inch dragon fish (i.e. violet goby.) I purchased him from the pet store last week. The girl didn't know much about them except that they are nocturnal and can thrive in freshwater. Problem is, I can't get the guy to eat at all. I offer him tubifex cubes (let them get mushy and sink to the bottom - won't eat it when it is right in front of him), bloodworms, krill, shrimp pellets, and feeder guppies during the day & at night. He just won't eat anything. I am really worried because he looks kinda thin and it has been a week since he has eaten. I called the pet store, and they said to feed him frozen or freeze dried foods. Alot of help that was. Temperature is 76 F, 50 gallon long tank, 7.2 pH, lots of live plants, and a cave. HELP! --Cookie |
#2
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they are brackish fish and wont live long in freshwater. they are also
filter feeders and ive read that they love algae wafers. here is the sites that i found before on them. found on http://www.wetwebmedia.com/BrackishS...acgobioids.htm " Gobioides broussonenti Lacepede 1800, the Dragon Eel/Goby, Violet Goby (3). Western Atlantic, Carolinas to Brazil, Gulf of Mexico. To twenty inches in length (largest Caribbean Goby). A difficult fish to keep due to its feeding strategy of filtering planktonic organisms. " found this on tropical fish forums. " Some sites will tell you that violet gobies aka dragon gobies will eat small fish but IMO this is rubbish. They have huge mouths with what look like teeth protruding from the front of the jaw but are actually filter feeders which feed by taking in gulps of water and filtering the water through the gill rakers to sieve out tiny particals of food. We have one in a 55 community with small fish and have never had one eaten, the goby struggles with large bloodworms let alone being able to swallow fish. This is where the tricky biy comes in, since they are filter feeders they are difficult to feed and need special care to keep alive. They will not take pellet or flake foods and will need to be fed small live or frozen foods every day, daphia, brineshrimp, black mosquito larvae, glassworm and bloodworms will all be eaten. " http://sunflower.bio.indiana.edu/~sholtzma/fish.html http://boeing_dude.tripod.com/id234.htm http://species.fishindex.com/species...olet_goby.html http://www.whozoo.org/Anlife2001/joh...dragonfish.htm hope this helps. |
#3
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"blove" wrote in message .. .
they are brackish fish and wont live long in freshwater. they are also filter feeders and ive read that they love algae wafers. here is the sites that i found before on them. found on http://www.wetwebmedia.com/BrackishS...acgobioids.htm " Gobioides broussonenti Lacepede 1800, the Dragon Eel/Goby, Violet Goby (3). Western Atlantic, Carolinas to Brazil, Gulf of Mexico. To twenty inches in length (largest Caribbean Goby). A difficult fish to keep due to its feeding strategy of filtering planktonic organisms. " found this on tropical fish forums. " Some sites will tell you that violet gobies aka dragon gobies will eat small fish but IMO this is rubbish. They have huge mouths with what look like teeth protruding from the front of the jaw but are actually filter feeders which feed by taking in gulps of water and filtering the water through the gill rakers to sieve out tiny particals of food. We have one in a 55 community with small fish and have never had one eaten, the goby struggles with large bloodworms let alone being able to swallow fish. This is where the tricky biy comes in, since they are filter feeders they are difficult to feed and need special care to keep alive. They will not take pellet or flake foods and will need to be fed small live or frozen foods every day, daphia, brineshrimp, black mosquito larvae, glassworm and bloodworms will all be eaten. " http://sunflower.bio.indiana.edu/~sholtzma/fish.html http://boeing_dude.tripod.com/id234.htm http://species.fishindex.com/species...olet_goby.html http://www.whozoo.org/Anlife2001/joh...dragonfish.htm hope this helps. Thank you so much for the info! Since he is small, and since I have always in the back of my mind wanted a brackish water tank, I think that I might look into starting up and maintaining a brackish water tank. Am going to start hatching brine shrimp right away. Thanks, --Cookie |
#4
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Oh, yes, thank you from here also!
These have appeared (for quite a low price too) in a local pet store. I wonder if it's the same chain? I'm fascinated and was considering one, but didn't know enough to look for information on "gobies" ("dragonfish" pulled up a lot of arrowana material and I didn't filter through it all). I'm still interested, but will have to think it through. How quickly do they grow? I'm thinking a 20" fish, even an eel-shaped one, will need a fair bit of room in time. Gads, I hope the pet store is feeding these guys right. They're in a tank with peacock eels. Then again, I know they feed bloodworms regularly. ----------------------------------------- Only know that there is no spork. |
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