I second this, especially in regards to goonch surviving long term.
Ime, they are remarkably sensitive to change and will go into shock. Both of the goonch I've succeeded in raising out of the initial sensitive phase of introduction into a new tank from a retailer have not survived when I attempted to move from one house to another. I had Dottie, a rutilus, that lived in a tropical (~78*) tank for almost 3 years. She (randomly assigned pronoun lol) ate pellets, was stable and grew from about 6" to 12" at death when I moved homes and tried to transfer her. 3D the Defiler, a lica, lived with me for almost two years. Same tank conditions as Dottie. He (random again) grew from 6" to almost a foot in that time, and would eat or kill pellets and literally anything else made of organic material I put into the tank. He also died after I moved homes and tried to move him to the new house.
I see goonch as a remarkable risk that should only be introduced into well established systems that are immune from disturbance or disruption. I feel that a goonch tank should be treated with the same care and attentiveness to stability that one would provide to a saltwater reef. These simply aren't fish that can go into a bucket when you're moving.