spotted garden eel

DeepSeaBeauti

Will Fielitz
I got one of these interesting eels this past Thursday as a freebie. It is awesome looking. After acclimating it to my aquarium i put it in my qt tank, and then in the DT Sunday. It was swimming around the top of the tank for a while, came back a few Min's later and now i cant seam to find it. I have a glass top on my tank so i don't think it got out. But i do have a large rock cave, and rock work so it could hide in many places. Does anyone have experience with these guys?
 
Only thing I know about them is that they pretty much live in the sand and they require a fairly deep substrate, like 8" I think. Yours is probably hiding in the sand. Do a search on garden eels on here on rc, there are a few people on that keep them
 
Garden eels are escape artists. Be sure that you have every possible opening taken care of. Otherwise, its only a matter of time before you find it dried up somewhere.

They are not easy fishes to feed. The garden eels I have helped keep were accepting live mysis. They are skittish and are probably best kept in a dedicated tank.

As jarrod mentioned, they also need a very deep substrate of the proper grain size. Unless feeding, the eels I have seen are always tucked into their burrows in the sand bed.
 
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Thanks Klepto, I have about a 6" sand bed more in some places, so I'm not too worried about that. Its also a fine grain sand i got from local beaches.

I have a glass lid on my tank, the only opening is behind the rock wall. I think I'm going to have to search for this guy tonight when i get home from work. Perhaps i should sell him off(assuming its still in there). I don't like handling specimens that i have not properly researched.
 
Don't look for it in the tank, it will come out in time and stressing it out will just make it harder to acclimate. I have collected both of the common Atlantic species and when you first put them in they will dig into the sand and stay there.

They will eat prepared foods eventually but Klepto is correct, they are not easy to feed. The food has to be the correct size and has to be moving across the tank about 2 to 6 inches off the bottom. They are also very shy, at first every time something moves in front of the tank they will go down into the burrow, so to watch them you have to be very still with the room dark and the tank light on. This makes them even more difficult to feed because the eel is going to drop under the sand as soon as you approach the tank, and then you have to make sure the food is moving around the tank when he finally comes back out, the other fish can't have eaten it all and the filters have to keep it moving and not suck it up, not an easy combination to over come.

What I did (and what most people who are successful at keeping them do) is to keep them alone. They are social so you can keep several together but any aggressive feeder or active fish will just disturb them. I had 3 in a 60 gallon cube and put a mirror on the back and sides of the tank along with live eel grass. The mirrors not only made the tank look bigger but it also gave the eels the feeling that there were more of them in the colony.
 
What I did (and what most people who are successful at keeping them do) is to keep them alone. They are social so you can keep several together but any aggressive feeder or active fish will just disturb them. I had 3 in a 60 gallon cube and put a mirror on the back and sides of the tank along with live eel grass. The mirrors not only made the tank look bigger but it also gave the eels the feeling that there were more of them in the colony.
What a great idea.
 
Well its been almost a week, and i still have not seen my garden eel. I check everywhere around the tank, both outside and inside. No signs of this guy. Its defiantly not anywhere outside of the aquarium. The inside is a bit more difficult because of my rock work. Any ideas?
 
Well its been almost a week, and i still have not seen my garden eel. I check everywhere around the tank, both outside and inside. No signs of this guy. Its defiantly not anywhere outside of the aquarium. The inside is a bit more difficult because of my rock work. Any ideas?

I would sit quietly in front of the tank tonight with tank light on and all light sources in the room off, add some food to get the smell in the water and watch. That is your best chance of seeing it if it has set up a burrow. If you don't see it for an hour, try again the next night, but after 3 days you might want to look through the gravel, just remember if it is alive and just stressed or scared that is the worst thing you can do to it.
 
Found him!!!!!!! Almost month and a half later!! but here it is.

<img src="http://i.imgur.com/XYgRil.jpg" alt="" title="Hosted by imgur.com" />

<img src="http://i.imgur.com/ujjBSl.jpg" alt="" title="Hosted by imgur.com" />
 
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Just make sure you feed a lot. They should be fed at least twice a day. Good luck I like them a lot but they are not and easy one to keep.
 
I have a brown spotted snake moray eel in my 60 gallon. Its a dwarf eel so it only gets to be 12". After i added him i had not seen him for a week so when the lights went off, I went and shone a flashlight in the tank and sure enough there he was. He only comes out like a half-hour after the lights go out every night. I'm going to transfer him into a 60 gallon by his self, hoping he'll come out and i can easily feed him.
 
This guy was eating up a storm yesterday. He must be eating on his own because I only feed my tank once a day. This guy has been in there for over a month with out me knowing.
I have a lot of critters living in the rocks and sand so there is plenty for it to eat other wise. When my pumps race up the blow all kinds of goods around the tank. Was cool watching it snatch them up.
Any other tips or sugestions as to care for this amazing critter?
 
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