Exciting News from ORA!

Johnny C

New member
Everyone loves Mandarins... unfortunatly for us hobbyists, they don't have the best track record for success in our aquariums. Thanks to ORA, this shouldn't be a problem much longer. The article below was released by ORA. Hopefully it won't be long before they hit our LFS's! :D

For many years marine aquarium hobbyists have been captivated by the exquisite beauty of Mandarin Gobies (actually Dragonettes). Their popularity, however, is tempered by the fact that they are difficult to feed in captivity and are subject to questionable collection practices in the wild. Unfortunately, most Mandarins succumb to starvation in home aquariums, even with the best intentions and attempts at feeding. Thankfully, all of that is about to change.

ORA biologists have succeeded in developing the methods needed to breed and raise commercial numbers of the two species of Mandarins, the Blue Mandarin (Synchiropus splendidus) and the Spotted Mandarin (Synchiropus picturatus). Building on the early success of breeders such as Julian Sprung, Wolfgang Mai, and more recently Matt Wittenrich, ORA is now poised to have commercially bred Mandarins available to everyone. The significance of this cannot be understated as it is a major advance in marine aquaculture and solves many of the problems associated with keeping these species.

Just as the first captive bred Seahorses were trained to eat frozen foods, ORA has already trained our baby Mandarins to eat commercially available frozen diets. This fact alone makes them easy to feed and care for, and the average aquarist will delight in not having to worry about sources of live food for their finicky eaters. Our goal is to have them soon weaned onto a pellet diet. We expect to have these fish eating pelletized foods before being released for sale.

ORA is the leader in bringing the marine aquarium industry new and exciting aquacultured species. With the addition of Mandarins to our ever-growing list, a major milestone in aquaculture has been achieved. We are sure that our retail customers and hobbyists alike will be elated that captive raised Mandarins are finally available and that a page has been turned in the tragic history of this beloved aquarium fish.

We expect to have significant numbers of Spotted Mandarins available this summer. Blue and Red Mandarins will be available in more limited quantities around the same time.


ora-mandarin-goby-420x297.jpg
ora_dragonettes_3-420x297.jpg
 
Last edited:
Sweet! Any idea when ARC will have them Jon? I talked to the local fish stores here in Elmira and neither will order from ORA.......
 
Sweet! Any idea when ARC will have them Jon? I talked to the local fish stores here in Elmira and neither will order from ORA.......
That's very unfortunate... ORA is a fundamental part of our hobby. No word on release dates yet, but hopefully in the next few months!
 
That's great. Too many of these wild caught mandarins starve to death. I look forward to the release by ora.
 
great post, Johnny.

note that Matt Wittenrich (one breeder mentioned in the article) is from western New York.

On a sad note the CEO of ORA (Jim Norris) passed away very recently.
 
Tank raised Mandarins by Ora will be a significant improvement in our ability to keep these fish healthy. However, having a fish that will eat prepared foods is only a first step. They will still be slow, deliberate feeders with little chance of competing for food with faster, more aggressive fish. They are unlikely to feed out of the water column and will still "hunt". We know that the metabolism of these fish require them to feed frequently, so whether they eat prepared or not, we will certainly have to target feed them often.
 
Always nice to see another species on the tank raised list.

I believe ABC in Syracuse has already gotten them in. I don't personally have any feedback on survivablility or longevity, doesn't mean the store doesn't.

I do know we're planning on putting one in the zoo tank in keeping with the aquacultured corals and captive bred fishes, theme.
 
Nice article, its a step in the right direction. Now hopefully they do live longer. I've wanted one for awhile but after reading up on them I didn't think one would survive in my system long.

Cully when did ABC start getting them in? I've seen some there, just didn't know they were these ORA ones. Thats good to know.
 
I agree with Eileen. They will still be a challenge and need some non competitive environs but easier than now. Foods like cyclopeeze settle on substrate and may give these captive bred varieties something to peck at when pods are exhausted. If they do get them to take small pellets it could be even better.
 
I think i got lucky.

I owned my wild female blue mandarin for 2 yrs now. With a sixline in the tank.

tank is only 60 gal long.
Mandarin was purchased small with a little bit of a sunken belly, took about 6 months for her to look like a sausage link again.

Never spot fed or directed prepared food in her direction. She has only lived off her hunting, and maybe some scraps that fall to the bottom.

I do have a 10 gal fuge(slow flow) with rock rubble towers that swarm with pods of all sizes. So many i thought of selling some bottles myself. They form swarms in the shape of a circle 100's of pods deep.

If you need pods i got em!


I guess i concentrated more on what the pods needed to thrive(slow flow, small places,food), and not the mandarin.

Really a pointless post on my part, and will probably lead people to think it is that simple, but had to share because i found my mandarin to be the easiest fish to care far of all. I forget it is even in the tank sometimes.

IMO/IME


Ora mandarins may make it possible to get a mate for my female, and not worry about further pod competition, that would be sweet!
 
i found my mandarin to be the easiest fish to care far of all. I forget it is even in the tank sometimes
ditto but I didn't bother to post this.

The "key" is the amount of liverock and 'pods. I've never had to feed any of my Mandarins and I've had spawning pairs in the past.
I hope ORA doesn't try to jack the price on these because they are "trained" :fun4:
 
I haven't gotten any word on pricing and pre-ordering is something you would have to discuss with your LFS (IMO there is no need). Paying $30-40 for one healthy Mandarin makes more sense than trying 2-3 only to have them die, though. This is a revolutionary step in the ornamental aquarium industry; this is one fish that (if I didn't already have one) I wouldn't mind paying a small premium for. They deserve it! :)

Cully... are you sure about that? From what I know they aren't being released until late June/July.
 
Last edited:
well... since Mandarins usually last me a really long time I guess it wouldn't hurt me if they jacked their price to $40 - $50.

It would definitely keep the Mandarin killers to a minimum.
 
Back
Top