Do all Gobies swim at the top of tank for a few days?

ser_renely

Active member
I had a question, I have had two YW gobies(one passed on after a few days a couple weeks ago) The one I have now is a few days old but like the other one tries his/her darndest to jump out of my tank, or get somewhere that does not include water. He is always swimming at the top, breaking the surface. All other fish are fine, I believe it is not an oxygen problem.

I have read this is somewhat common of gobies when first put into a tank is that true? Is there anything I can do to help him settle better? He has lots of hiding place, A couple of pistol shrimp, its a passive tank, and is bugging me to see him being suicidal. Could it be too much flow that is upsetting him?


Any ideas ?

Thanks,
Ser
 
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My Yasha gobies never swim out in the open. They're pretty much bottom dwellers, and hide in their burrows all day. Although, I did find one in my sump one time, but since then they've stuck to their burrows for the past 4 or 5 months.
 
Definitely not normal behavior. Something's wrong. Usually when a fish is at the top, especially a bottom fish, he's got gill trouble. Could be ich in the gills. Hard to say.
 
Thanks.

I know its not normal for this fish, but from my searching the web it seems a lot of them do this for the first few days. Really just wonder what prompts it, other then being ripped from your home suddenly and put into a new one, and how to calm him down.

I should clarify he will be fine for a few hours, then for 20 minutes start the crazy swimming at the top. rinse and repeat.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13628301#post13628301 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Sk8r
Definitely not normal behavior. Something's wrong. Usually when a fish is at the top, especially a bottom fish, he's got gill trouble. Could be ich in the gills. Hard to say.

I agree with Sk8r. It sounds like your getting sick fish.
 
No. If they calm down and settle, it wasn't ich.

Early on with a potential jumper is dicey: they NEED to burrow or claim a hole, and once they do, they are far less likely to jump, because their little mental switch is set for 'dive' in event of threat rather than 'climb'. They will go to their hole if threatened. The YWG is a burrower/sandsifter, and if too shallow a sandbed or no sandbed may get confused; also, the presence of other fishes he considers a threat may bother him. I have noted a tendency to react to fishes with yellow on them, particularly yellow tails, for some reason. If there is such a roommate, he may be reluctant to settle.
 
Thank you for the info.

I don't believe I have anything with yellow on the tail, orange and red on the clowns and Firefish respectively.

If he does not calm down and find a home I will QT him and give him some meds in the hope of correcting something that is wrong with him.

I just saw him for the first time today, and he was at the bottom doing what gobies do. He ate when I had feeding time. Fat little bugger. Lets hope it continues and he finds a home and or a pistol.

Thanks,
Ser
 
Get it a pistol shrimp to pair with & it will stay by its burrow. My YWG swam around top of tank for a whilebefore I got Pistol Shrimp. Now it stays by burrow with pistol protecting it.
 
Actual Answer - Skip the speculative comments

Actual Answer - Skip the speculative comments

Some breeds of gobies like to sit outside of the water on rocks, especially at low tide at night. If your gobie is constantly trying to swim to the top, he wants a perch that is above the water level. I use a magnetic glass cleaner. Just ensure that it is in a position that makes it impossible for him to jump out of the aquarium.
 
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