P.T. Barnum was right...

Gorgeous fish! Are they in the same group of prawn gobies that will pair up with pistol shrimp? I have a HiFin Redbanded Prawn Goby in my tank and he lives in the same hole as my candy stripe pistol shrimp. Its neat to watch the two live together.
 
I've gotten conflicting information on whether they pair with pistol shrimp or not. Some resources say yes, others say no. In any regard, I no longer keep pistol shrimp because mine turned into fish killers. Perhaps it was because I had a mated pair of pistol shrimp, but they killed 2 fish, so I traded them and their yasha goby back to the LFS.
 
The larger one came from the now defunct Reef Hot Spot. I think I got the very last order they shipped. The new one came from Blue Zoo.
 
A few more pics for your viewing pleasure. Imagine a toothpick with fins, and you've pretty much got the scale correct:

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Wow! Very beautiful but teeny-tiny fish! If you are still considering dither fish, check out the red-spot cardinals, Apogon parvalus...small, attractive, and, no threat to the gobies.
 
I've discovered that the best dither fish for a fpg is another fpg. I've seen my original fish out in the tank more often this week than in the past 3 months. I have to believe that's because it knows another fpg is in the tank, even though I haven't seen them together since the new fish was introduced.
 
Well, there was a bit of disruption in their service a few months back where they quit responding to all inquiries, listed everything as "out of stock" and canceled every order. You can check the vendor feedback thread--there's a recent post about someone who had a problem. They seem to have opened back up in a limited way, and I believe they are also doing business under another name--aquarium arts? In any regard, it's not the fantastic retailer it used to be.
 
So, it's been 18 months, more or less, and the flaming prawn gobies are doing fine. Turns out they thrive on benign neglect. They are now in a 65G mixed passive tank along with a mated pair of threadfin cardinals, an alligator pipefish, a target mandarin, a few other gobies (pink bar, Hasselt's, citron clown), and six different species of shrimp (sexy, peppermint, blood red fire, pistol, grass, skunk cleaner). Sometimes I don't see them for weeks, and sometimes I see them for a few days in a row. Both have bodied out quite a bit, although a full grown FPG is still a tiny, tiny fish. Sadly, they are not a pair, and seemed to have staked out territories on opposite sides of the tank.

Crappy pic because my camera can't figure out what it should focus upon...

jayelblock
 
Getting a pic of a flaming prawn goby is like getting a picture of Bigfoot, always blurry and you can barely make anything out. That is a good pic
 
wow...stunning little fish! Like little gems. My pom pom crabs are like that - they only come out every once on a while. So glad the 1st one made it through the rescape - tough little bugger!
 
My pleasure. I hope to get some better pictures tomorrow.

As it turns out, I see them much more often now that they're in a 65g than I did when they were in the nano. I understand the impulse to keep a small fish in a small tank, but these guys really cruise around. They move through the rock work, but they also like to hang out near a clump of chaeto and hunt pods. I have a big ball of chaeto in my display tank, and while it's not beautiful, it is a hotbed of activity. The alligator pipefish hunts over there, as does the mandarin.

I've given up on the notion of having a pristine tank (I have about 9 types of nuisance algae that never get out of hand but never completely go away), and instead have allowed for some biodiversity. Everyone seems happy.
 
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