mattgumaer
New member
Hi all,
I have been thinking about adding a sand sifting fish (or a couple) to my 180 gallon reef to keep the sand looking nice. I have no algae on my rocks, probably because my foxface and tangs (powder blue, yellow and kole) keep them clean. But, the top of my sand is well, pretty brown. Other fish include a couple of clowns, a mandarin, 6 anthias, a copperband, a fairy wrasse, a flasher wrasse and a yellow clown goby (my first fish).
I have looked at gold headed sleeper gobies and twin spots. My concerns are: 1) potential competition with mandarin for pods (both); 2) burying coral (more the bigger sleeper gobies); 3) eating all life in the sand bed (both); and 4) particularly with a pair of twin spots, the potential that the fish will slowly waste away as often happens with these fish from on-line research.
I am hopeful that two twin spots would be ok in my 180 because of the size of the tank and relatively deep sand bed (probably close to 3" on average). Is this wishful thinking?
Would gold headed sleepers (and any other sleepers) make a mess of my tank, eat everything alive in my sandbed and leave me constantly uncovering low lying coral?
If neither of these fish are a good idea, is there a better alternative?
Thanks.
Matt
I have been thinking about adding a sand sifting fish (or a couple) to my 180 gallon reef to keep the sand looking nice. I have no algae on my rocks, probably because my foxface and tangs (powder blue, yellow and kole) keep them clean. But, the top of my sand is well, pretty brown. Other fish include a couple of clowns, a mandarin, 6 anthias, a copperband, a fairy wrasse, a flasher wrasse and a yellow clown goby (my first fish).
I have looked at gold headed sleeper gobies and twin spots. My concerns are: 1) potential competition with mandarin for pods (both); 2) burying coral (more the bigger sleeper gobies); 3) eating all life in the sand bed (both); and 4) particularly with a pair of twin spots, the potential that the fish will slowly waste away as often happens with these fish from on-line research.
I am hopeful that two twin spots would be ok in my 180 because of the size of the tank and relatively deep sand bed (probably close to 3" on average). Is this wishful thinking?
Would gold headed sleepers (and any other sleepers) make a mess of my tank, eat everything alive in my sandbed and leave me constantly uncovering low lying coral?
If neither of these fish are a good idea, is there a better alternative?
Thanks.
Matt