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01/07/2015, 03:14 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Leeds, UK
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Goby/shrimp pair substrate
Hi all!
At some point I'd like to start a high tech 100g tank to grow a large collection of corals and anemones, with a SSB. It will be my first tank so I'd like to avoid the DSB for now. One thing that I'm really looking forward to is having a goby/shrimp symbiotic pair and I'd like some advice from you experienced reefers to set the tank up in the best possible way. I know that getting a goby and shrimp together will not definitely result in them painring up but I want to get things set up to encourage it. I've seen that when a goby pairs with a shrimp, it tends to stop sifting the sand and focuses on being a lookout for the shrimp. I can get other creatures to stir up the substrate so thats not a big issue. I'm just wondering whether its better to: 1) have fine sand so that it still do some sifting if it wants to (for food), but then the shrimp cant make a very good cave entrance because the sand will roll back down. 2) have slightly coarse substrate so that the shrimp can do a bit of landscaping around the cave, but then the goby cant sift anything and that could be a problem if it's not eating enough. 3) have fine sand to allow the goby to sift, but have some purposely placed live rock and small rocks around the cave entrance so that the shrimp can move stuff around a bit. This would give them both the chance to do their own thing. Any advice on this is appreciated! Do certain types of Goby and pistol shrimp pair more easily? More importantly, how much do the different types of Goby sift? Also, with lots of corals I need to be aware of Gobies spitting sand everywhere. Cheers, Rad91 |
01/07/2015, 07:10 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Southern California
Posts: 628
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Hey there, it sounds like you're thinking things through pretty well.
I've got a 90 dt set up that houses a Yellow Watchman goby that is paired up now with a Tiger Pistol. I run a mixed reef in my tank and used all sugar fine (oolitic sand). The depth sand bed for me is kind of important so the shrimp has enough space to burrow. I run 2 inches in low spots and 4 inches or so in the deep spots as the bed has shifted around and settled due to flow, fish, shrimp, etc. But if you have really hollow rocks, the shrimp may take up a burrow there too. Mine has built a burrow down under/inside a large rock tower I built. My shrimp & goby have been happily living there for almost a year together now with now issues maintaining the den. Even with all oolitic sand, the shrimp burrowed and maintained the den just fine. It eventually found an empty snail shell to use as a doorway for a time. Now, anytime I break up some rock rubble to attach a frag to, I grab the little pencil eraser size bits & drop them near the den enterance. Makes for fun viewing watching the YWG lookout while the shrimp ventures out to collect the bits to build with. One way to get around a DSB for the shrimp is to lay some pvc pipe tunnels beneath rock/sand which will keep the fine sand from collapsing in on the den. Or at least make entry ways for a den. But I found they were fine without. One thing I did try over the pvc pipes was, since I started with all dry rock, I used 2 long narrow pieces of rock that were about 2-3 inches thick as feet & attached a larger rock (like a bridge/roof) between them. So I ended up with a stable rock tower elevated up with an empty 2 inches of sand below. My thought was to make a pistol shrimp cave because I was worried about the fine sand collapsing. My shrimp & goby ened up choosing a spot somewhere else anyway and could care less. Any Shrimp Goby should eventually pair with a tiger or bullseye pistol shrimp. Avoid Sleeper Gobies. They most likely won't pair & are the big sifters. My YWG paired with our pistol after a couple months or so in the dt together. Just give it time and they'll prolly figure it out. As for sand sifting from my shrimp goby. My YWG pecks at the sand occasionally throughout the day. But only within a few fish lengths from the den enterance where it hangs out to keep watch. It doesnt sift enough to cause any problem. I would say the pistol shrimp kicks and stirs up way more sand then the YWG when cleaning the enterance. But it's not enough sand to upset my favia, acans, zoas near their den. The goby just grabs a mouthful & drops it at the den enterance after chewing/sifting it. Then typically the shrimp digs it back out. LOL I hope that helps. Go for it, they're really a great pair & lots of fun to watch. I'll probably always keep a pair in my systems from now on. Let me know if you got any other questions I may have missed.
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90g Mixed Reef: (36x12) Ecosystem Pro Sump w/ 75g refugium, 2 Eheim Jager Heaters, 15w UV Sterilizer, (2*1600gph) powerheads w/ Wavemaker, Rio #12HF, Bubble Magus: NAC6, Reef Angel, and DIY Rapid LED Current Tank Info: 90 gallon mixed reef tank with 75 gallon fuge and ecosystem sump. |
01/08/2015, 05:12 AM | #3 | ||||
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Location: Leeds, UK
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Off to surf the web some more now! Looking at Oolitic sand. Avoiding sleeper gobies and looking at shrimp gobies. Looking at tiger or bullseye shrimp. |
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01/08/2015, 06:35 PM | #4 | ||
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Location: Southern California
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My understanding on the 2 inch or less or 4 inch or more rule is more for sand bed filtering ability. A full 4 inch + deep bed is deep enough to have a low oxygen zone where certain bacteria can complete the nitrogen cycle. 2-3ish inches isn't enough to create this zone. But 2 inches or less can support sand bed life (micro/macro fauna) and host bacteria that help with the beginning of the nitrogen cycle. Hence being in the middle ground can create a detritus tap & nutrient sink. A dsb can develop toxic gas pockets from what I've read. I've not had this issue in the 1.5 years for this system. I try avoid this by having animals that stir & turn over my sand bed for me. Quote:
And you're right, I do have other stuff to turn the bed. I have a few Tongan conchs that do a great job of stirring the same. Plus nassarius snails, cerith snails, spaghetti worms, bristle worms, and mini brittle stars. These cover what the pistol shrimp doesn't burrow in. And I do have a 75 gallon fuge in the closet next to my sump seeded with the same micro fauna. This has the same footprint as my 90 dt but has a full dsb with additional rockwork elevated of the sand bed with pvc/egg crate platforms. This gives me extra filtration to combat any nutrient issues with the shifting depth of the sand in the dt. It's been a great help yes! Thank you! [/QUOTE] Glad I could help with some thoughts and ideas. I love having them paired up. One of the coolest things in my tank right now. At least I think so.
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90g Mixed Reef: (36x12) Ecosystem Pro Sump w/ 75g refugium, 2 Eheim Jager Heaters, 15w UV Sterilizer, (2*1600gph) powerheads w/ Wavemaker, Rio #12HF, Bubble Magus: NAC6, Reef Angel, and DIY Rapid LED Current Tank Info: 90 gallon mixed reef tank with 75 gallon fuge and ecosystem sump. |
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01/08/2015, 11:47 PM | #5 |
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Roseburg, Oregon
Posts: 120
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I plan on getting a Pink spot goby for my planned 40b. I have not decided on sand size, thinking about sugar size but worried the goby will spread it all over corals on the sandbed. I do know I want a 2" sandbed. I also plan on a 4" DSB in my fuge, but also do not know what size for DBS.
Any recommendations?
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Keep on Reef'in Current Tank Info: I do not have a tank yet as they are very $$$ and I am only 16, But I have been able to afford a lot of information on them. |
01/09/2015, 06:10 AM | #6 | ||
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A lot of people online say that they rarely swim up and drop sand so you should be ok... but I have seen a few mention that they kick sand up. Based on what I've seen, it shouldn't be a problem if you dont put any corals on the Sand bed right next to their cave... but that might not accuractely reflect on the beaviour of your goby |
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Tags |
goby, pistol shrimp, pistol shrimp goby, sifter, substrate |
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