Diamond goby breeding

maybe i missed something. how did the eggs get out of the goby's den? my goby pair is starting to behave differently too. aside from their constant burrow excavating, the male (i'm assuming because he's got more orange spots and a little more yellow) swims in front of the female with is body bent in a weird way momentarily. sometimes he sways his tail back and forth.

he buries female in the den for most of the day but she still comes out to eat. hum..I wish I had a camera in their den to see what's up. I have video of them building their den but it doesn't do much good if I can't see what's happening in there.
 
When the female gets buried in, it's generally because she's tending eggs. So it's a good bet they've spawned :)
 
I know when my two were going to do the nasty one would kiss the other a lot. Pushing and kissing in a circle. Now that the female or male (cant tell) got attacked and died I don't know if him/her will pair up again. Freakin yellow tail damsels I hate those fish...
 
I found my couples den and can see in.. It's too cute.. (though I'd share)
 

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It is! Always awesome when they burrow up next to the glass.
Chaeto is probably a good addition to any rearing tank you set up. It'll grow pods, provide hiding spots, and eat nitrates. Caulerpa prolifera might also be an option, but it's not as good for pods. Just good for nitrate sucking.
 
When the female gets buried in, it's generally because she's tending eggs. So it's a good bet they've spawned :)

Sorry to disagree here,but it is always the male,not the female,the tending member of the pair in most marine fish,at least in all the tropical marine ornamentals that I know.

I had worked with this species in the past and posted it elsewhere.
 
i feel that it's the male that stays buried in the tunnels for days on end.
i used to think it was the female out of my breeding pair of stonogobiops nematodes that stayed in the tunnels... until i got some good photos of the pair together...the fatter of a breeding pair is almost always the female.
 
Sorry to disagree here,but it is always the male,not the female,the tending member of the pair in most marine fish,at least in all the tropical marine ornamentals that I know.

I had worked with this species in the past and posted it elsewhere.

I'd have double my check my notes on the pair I had breeding some years back. Unfortunately those notes are living in an attic back on LI. Pretty sure I recall it was the female of my pair that stayed behind in the burrow...based on body condition pre and post spawning. They had dug the burrow right down to the glass, and the tank stand was the sort that allowed me to look up from the bottom and spy on the nest and care.
 
I'd have double my check my notes on the pair I had breeding some years back. Unfortunately those notes are living in an attic back on LI. Pretty sure I recall it was the female of my pair that stayed behind in the burrow...based on body condition pre and post spawning. They had dug the burrow right down to the glass, and the tank stand was the sort that allowed me to look up from the bottom and spy on the nest and care.

When some brooding care is provided to the spawn;be it nest care,pouch brooding,mouth brooding or egg ball care,it is the male the one who takes the chore.
This is particularly true with gobies,where even if there are about 2,000 species with many different ways of life,it is always the father who cares for the nest.Quoting from "The Biology of Gobies"(CRC Press,2011):

"a basic reproductive pattern shared by all gobies consisting of the laying of demersal eggs cared for by the male until hatching"
 
hi there
i have sandsifting gobys that had some eggs how long does it take to hatch its been in the hole for a month that they keep it hiddin inside the hole
 
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