LittlePuff
New member
Would there be a problem keeping one with a midas or bicolor blenny, a couple clownfish, possible clown or YWG . and a saddled toby?
Everyone seems to be scooting around the issueI'll just come right out and ask if you know that these are not blennies at all and have the same feeding requirements as any other dragonet or mandarin. It would be best to wait until the 90 is up witha well established pod population.
That's what i was hinting at with if you can feed it. I hate the way they are called scooter blennies as most people assume blennies are easy to keep.
scooting around the issue
I know what you mean I'll always have a special place in my heart for my first --long nosed hawkfish (not counting the damsels which the LFS told me was my only choice for cycling).They're much easier to feed than the other mandarins. I've had a number of them and they all took frozen with vigor and had great body weight on two daily feedings with no flow for 1/2 hour each time so they can pick off the bottom. Was my very first saltwater fish.
Does it matter the order or are they ignored altogether?
I have a pair of mated clown gobies, and a bicolor blenny, that are very territorial at times. But when my red dragonet gets near them, they could care less. It's very interesting to see.
I think the most significant role that order plays is the dragonet will benefit from having no competition for food at first. And this can be accomplished in QT. This can be said of most fish, but more so for a fish like a dragonet that likes to approach his meals slowly and stealthily.
And of course, you don't want to have a dragonet in a tank with larger aggressive species. Rather than ignore him, they may decide to make a meal out of him.
Other fish will eat them? I thought they had a toxic slime and other fish didn't bother them for this reason? If its eaten by another fish will the slime kill the predator fish as well?
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I know what you mean I'll always have a special place in my heart for my first --long nosed hawkfish (not counting the damsels which the LFS told me was my only choice for cycling).
But you're saying feeding them if there's not enough pods requires time and commitment. That sounds like a major pita to me and choice of tank mates will be a more difficult issue (assuming he will take the food). Not that there's anything wrong with having a fish that's a pita to feed, just that you sure want to think it out carefully before going this route.