![]() |
New acquisition
Picked this little guy up yesterday. It is a Rainford Goby, or Rainford's Goby. My search for information came up with the fact that it is a hair algea eater. I have a bit of brown algae on the bottom. We'll see how it does with that. :biggrin:
http://members.shaw.ca/rcipema/rainfordone.jpg http://members.shaw.ca/rcipema/rainfordtwo.jpg |
Cool little fish - hope it does well with you.
|
very nice
hows that 6 line and yellow goby doing? |
Rainfrods gobies don't eat hair algae. They eat the inverts that live on and eat the algae.
Sorry. they require a tank of similar dimensions and age as a dragonette |
Agreed, reefer_11. The hover gobies (what a cheesy name) are sand sifters, who eat microcrustaceans. I don't think they would eat cyano, except if they happened to get a mouthful when sifting, as my Valenccia puellaris sometimes does. They require a fairly large tank to do well. I believe someone (Sam perhaps) out on the coast has a cousin to Rainford's Goby, a Hector's goby, and that individual can probably comment further.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
:neutral: I will partly take back what I said. From what I am finding out now, the diet of Amblygobius species ranges from fine algae to small crustaceans - "...filamentous algae, various crustacean groups, nematode worms..." (Fenner). Starvation remains the leading cause of death in captivity. Of course this is a problem with any fish that will not accept prepared foods. Whether yours makes a dent in your cyano (that's what it looks like to me) will be interesting to find out.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/amblygobius.htm |
Quote:
Steve |
Bob I've got one too, beautiful fish, some folks seem to call the Hectors gobies too, although others say the Hectors has different colouring. It's a reasonably active fish, not real shy but not a go getter.
Doug |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:52 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.