spicytuna
New member
Hello all,
I just recently got a clown goby about a week ago. I have a few sps and acropora colonies but he seems to host in only 3. The pearlberry, red table and my purple digi.
One concern of mine is, the pearlberry and red table have always had very long polyp extension, day and night. Since the goby has started hosting, these corals have not extended polyps in about a week now. Both corals seem to slightly have there polyps peaking out, but it definatley has caught me off gaurd and a tad concerned. The digi however is unaffected, and surprisingly the flow spends most his time in the digi anyways, probably because its the biggest.
Does anyone with experience with clown gobies, have similar opinions or experiences with a acros acclimating to the presence of this fish. All other parameters are find alk,cal,mag,salinity all in stable consistant ranges, phos and nitrate undetectable and all other corals are happy.
Here's a pic of the little guy. He does a great job of picking the stuck food from my colonies.
I just recently got a clown goby about a week ago. I have a few sps and acropora colonies but he seems to host in only 3. The pearlberry, red table and my purple digi.
One concern of mine is, the pearlberry and red table have always had very long polyp extension, day and night. Since the goby has started hosting, these corals have not extended polyps in about a week now. Both corals seem to slightly have there polyps peaking out, but it definatley has caught me off gaurd and a tad concerned. The digi however is unaffected, and surprisingly the flow spends most his time in the digi anyways, probably because its the biggest.
Does anyone with experience with clown gobies, have similar opinions or experiences with a acros acclimating to the presence of this fish. All other parameters are find alk,cal,mag,salinity all in stable consistant ranges, phos and nitrate undetectable and all other corals are happy.
Here's a pic of the little guy. He does a great job of picking the stuck food from my colonies.
