Quote:
	
	
		
			
				
					Originally Posted by  paddyob
					 
				 
				Twin spot are not a good choice for most.  As you already learned, better in pairs.   
 
Also more sensitive than others.  More of an advanced/expert fish.   
 
If you can't support it on sifting alone, you are going to have trouble.  
 
 
Get a baby sitter if you need one.   
 
Good luck. 
			
		 | 
	
	
 I can certainly support it by continuing to do what I'm doing: injecting the food into the sand. I'm hoping I don't have to do it forever, though. Once the new tank is set up I'll be investigating ways to populate the sandbed for him. Though I will continue to give him his "shrimp cocktail."
I didn't treat him for internal parasites, however. When I do the tank switch he'll be treated before moving to the new display tank. I suspect this is what will kill him: if I don't treat him.
The tank is peaceful, and he doesn't seem agitated or nervous. Of course, I have nothing to compare his behavior to so I may not know what I'm looking at.
I am going to have to find someone to pop into the house a couple of times, as we have a rabbit and plants that will also need care while we're away.
	Quote:
	
	
		
			
				
					Originally Posted by  dc4
					 
				 
				I've tried keeping a single signal goby and then a pair, didn't end well on either occasion and I over feed my tank twice a day. I would never recommend them to anyone and I think they should be left at the LFS so they stop stocking them. I have a pair of fat mating Mandarins and I would rate them a 5 and the twin spot a 10 in terms of difficulty if that helps. 
 
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I727 using Tapatalk 
			
		 | 
	
	
 How long did your gobies live? I desperately want a Mandarin, and now I'm thinking that maybe I can do it: if I can care for the goby as long as you did. 
 
If this one does well I may look for a partner for him, but that is the only reason I would ever purchase another one. I have read a couple of anecdotal stories online where a couple of people have been successful with them for a year+, but they are very much the minority.
I had researched "sand sifting gobies" in general, but I hadn't encountered this species in my research. I figured he had to be reasonably similar to the others. A quick "google" on my BlackBerry at the store didn't raise any red flags, so I went ahead with the purchase. Then when I did my in depth research at home while acclimating him, I learned about my mistake.