Does anyone have a Dragon Goby?

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Eglinlotus

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
May 31, 2013
187
1
0
Ft Walton Beach, FL
I saw this fish and was wondering if anyone has owned one and if so are they a brackish fish only or can they handle fresh water with aquarium salt. Whats their growth rate what should be their main source in their diet? All information you could give me would be great! Thank you.
 
Dragon Gobies are definitely brackish fish.. Aquarium salt isn't the same as marine salt mix (minerals etc.). These are filter-feeders. They take into their mouths sand and rocks, filter out the food, and expel the rest out through their gills.. I typically feed mine frozen mysis shrimp cubes (thawed, of course) and frozen brine shrimp. Mine is always in hiding and comes out during a feeding frenzy.. I'm pretty sure their eyesight is horrible, but can smell fairly well. I want to say they reach a length of about 12"
 
Dragon Gobies definitely require both brackish water and a sandy or muddy substrate in order to survive. They also cannot be kept with aggressive fish. Mine is very docile, but his poor eyesight will make it hard for him to get food if you have an aggressive fish. As 2columbians said they feed by sifting the sand, but they will also eat normally as well as scrape algae off of rocks with their teeth. My Goby goes nuts for blood worms, going as far as reenacting the jaws poster to get them from the surface.

Growth wise, I got my goby about a year ago at about 4 inches long, and he has now grown to about 13 inches and is still growing. You will need a large tank for this fish with plenty of hiding spaces, particularly caves. Also, you cannot expect to keep your sand manicured. My goby loves to move the sand around the tank constantly, which is great for avoiding anaerobic air pockets.
 
Oh wow. This is crazy. I just came back to check on the forums. I don't think I've posted here in years. Anyway, the photo you posted is of my old goby. He/she died a couple of years ago, I think from the dreaded red tumors that afflict this species. It was in brackish water though.
To answer your questions, they are estuarine fish, so we tend to think they more or less require brackish water long-term. I've heard of them growing to 60 cm (2 feet) in only a year, but their growth rate seems to vary a lot, possibly based on feeding and water quality. My friend (a former LFS owner) told me that someone had brought one in once that had grown up like that very quickly and was then eating its tankmates, so keep in mind that they may do that when they become larger. Oddly enough, that rapidly growing individual had been kept in freshwater, as have all the other very large ones I've heard of. I wonder sometimes if they mature in freshwater, and then move to brackish areas to live (and to the ocean to spawn). People say they're blind, but I don't really believe that. They're very territorial, and before it died, my violet goby would follow me and strike its aggressive pose at me, as well as attack my hand or the net. Because of this, keeping more than one of them together is probably ill-advised, especially if they differ in size by enough for one to effectively bully the other(s).
I'm more into fish that don't get that big now, but it was a cool fish to have. I'd still love to see a fully grown one in person.
 
Make sure you don't have the smallest of holes in the top of your tank. Mine jumped three times. The last time did him in.....

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mine started out eating frozen blood worms but i was able to switch him over to shrimp pellets and he loves them. mine is about 9inches and i got him 6months ago. when i got him he was about 8inches and very skinny, now he is healthy. one thing i have learned is that if they are distressed or unhappy they will breath rapidly and swim at the surface. the first goby i got had a disease when i got him and he just didn't act like a goby. also if he is happy he will put his fins up. but they are great fish. mine hides for most of the day in the rocks, and i can see him kick sand everywhere. he is a great eye catching fish when people are over. let us know if you have anymore questions. but definitely use marine salt and put him in brackish water.
 
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