Goby only tank

pstank1

New member
I have a 50ish gallon tank that I have recently started switching over to a full sps tank. I finally found a home for my long tentacle anemone. Now I just need to move my pair of black and white ocellaris to my cube and their new bubble tip.

Because my tank is only 30x18x21, I realized there isn't going to be a whole heck of a lot of room for fish to swim around once my corals start growing out, so I thought I would stock with little fish. Has anyone had any experience with stocking trimma gobies, eviotas, green banded gobies and other small gobies (staying away from clowns)?
 
I need to do more research on the interwebs to see which, if any, of these guys swim around in the mid to upper portion of the tank. I don't want to end up with a bunch of bottom dwellers.
 
So a few more questions if anyone has any input, that would be great.

My clowns will be moved to my cube tomorrow, so my tank will be down to one Paracheilinus carpenteri and one Priolepis nocturnus. I was looking to add 2 or 3 Elacatinus multifasciatum, 3 or so Eviota pellucida and Eviota nigriventris (each), then a few species of trimma.

Questions.

In a semi mature (about 4 years old) 50 gallon with 20 long sump, can I support that many? These guys are tiny, most of them stay under an inch. I think the Elacatinus multifasciatum are the largest of the ones i'm looking to add and i don't think they get much more than 1 1/2 inches from what I've read.

If i can stock that many, can i do it without having them kill each other? Will it be the war of the Lilliputians in my tank? Do they all need to go in at the same time or am I ok with just adding all of a specific species at once?
 
then a goby tank is not what you want. if you are just looking for small fish, that is another discussion.

+1 ...

Although the stocking list sounds quite coolio ;) A bunch of lil guys all cruising around through some SPS :) But, I do agree with the above. All of those are tiny little hiders. Keep us updated on what you end up doing, I'd like to tag along same as Sushi on this.
 
Well, by bottom dweller i meant more like my Priolepis nocturnus which just hangs out in a little cave all the time. I'm ok with them hanging around on top of the rocks, i just don't want all of them to be under the rocks.

I'm guessing it may come out more often once the clowns are out.

Divers den is listing a trio of Coryphopterus personatus that i may try to get. They look like they get a little on the larger side though, but should still have a pretty limited biomass i'd think. I've seen when diving down in Bonaire and St. Lucia, so i know they spend more time out in the open.

CoralandGobies-1.jpg


Sorry for the crummy quality but i had to crop a poor picture to see the gobies.
 
then a goby tank is not what you want. if you are just looking for small fish, that is another discussion.

There are several gobies that aren't burrowing/bottom dwellers. All the ones listed in his first post are not bottom dwellers.

Court Jester Goby
Gold Neon Eviota Goby
Hector's Goby An LFS here keeps a few of these in a pico on their checkout counter & they're always mid-tank when I see them.
Neon Goby
Red Neon Eviota Goby
Red Spotted Goby
Red Striped Goby

Pstank1, we were also looking into the Orange Lined Cardinalfish, Redspot Cardinalfish, and Longspine Cardinalfish so that's something you could look into...of course then it wouldn't be an all goby tank LOL.

Just reading about the gobies, it seems most of them will fight within types unless mated, but it really said nothing about if they would fight with different types of the same basic shape, but most fish do.
 
I was looking at the cardinals as well, one of the stores near me has a group of longspines in right now, but I've got a redspot in my cube and it eats large chunks of food. My general rule of thumb is that if a mouth is large enough to fit a fish in it, that fish will most likely end up in the mouth at some point in time.

I'm probably going to stay away from cardinals if i decide to stock up on eviotas and trimmas.
 
My orbic cardinal does have a really large mouth, but I didn't realize the small ones did too since no one here carries them. That's good to know. We were planning more on just cardinals, but I can see why you wouldn't want to mix them.
 
I was looking at those. Those are the gobies that were in that fuzzy picture i posted a few pictures back from a dive trip.
 
Hmm, I"m finding out I need to do more resarch on these little guys. Some eviota gobies have a natural life span of 5 months, many in the 18-20 months range and a few longer. Some of the trimmas live around 2 years as well. I want to make sure i don't end up with the shot lived ones.
 
I'm fine with replacing a fish if it dies of old age after being in my tank a few years. I'm not ok with putting a fish in that could die of old age the day after i put it in my tank. I think i'm going to stay away from the eviota gobies entirely, they are just too short lived for me.

I'm thinking about picking up 6 or so Elacatinus multifasciatus. Has anyone tried a group this large or larger. Right now there's just one firefish, and one Priolepis nocturnus in my tank. My lfs just called to tell me that my red mandarin came in, so that'll go in over the weekend.
 
I bought a neon blue goby last weekend and so far he's doing great - awesome little fish! He doesn't hang out anywhere near the bottom of the tank... prefers perching on the back wall and mid-tank LR. He's sill a bit shy, but does swim around some in the mid and upper tank.
 
I went ahead and placed an order for 6 multifasciatus from my lfs. They should be in next week. I'm looking forward to seeing how this works out. I'd still like to add a few other fish. Maybe 2 or 3 trima canna's or maybe a Paracheilinus lineopunctatus, I really like the looks of those.
 
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