Feeding Bumblebee Goby

Something Fishy

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Having had a couple of Bumblebee Gobys for a while I have now found they like Brackish water .. although a lot of people seem to be able to keep them in Freshwater, and mine seem to have been surviving pretty well. I have also now discovered that I should be feeding them differently, I have seen one eat flakes but not the other.
I have just ventured to my LFS and bought some Brine Shrimp & Bloodworms (not live in some gel stuff I believe). I am just going to try it out ... wish me luck! Eat little fishies eat!
What do your Gobies like to eat?
 
Mine did try flake (actually granules) but they spat it out and had disgusted looks on their little faces. Mine just get frozen - daphnia, artemia, bloodworms and sometimes a bit of cichlid mix. They are definitely carnivores!!
 
the gel should work.
when i had bumblebees, they would attack the gel as soon as it hit the bottom of the tank (always made a big mess too)
yes-they are brackish. i had mine in .007-.010 sg
i believe there is a freshwater species also but chances are, you have the brackish ones.

sir/ladyminion should be able to help out a little more with this topic. ;)
 
Although there is one species that will survive in freshwater, all species of bumblebee goby do considerably better in light brackish water, so props to you for that!

We'll be moving ours to brackish just as soon as the sick F8 puffer in there is healthy again.

Our BBGs eat:
  • Live or frozen bloodworm
  • live or frozen brine shrimp
  • live or frozen daphnia
  • Live small earthworms
  • Gel-based foods
  • Crushed sinking catfish pellets
  • Occasional flake
 
Hmm i did wonder about digging around in the garden!! He tried the bloodworm, ate a bit but spat the next one out, will try them again and see how it goes. Also have some brine shrimp to try. The other fish liked it anyway!
With the live stuff ... how long do they stay alive? I dont have a huge amount of fish and am thinking any live i buy is not going to get eaten iyswim
 
In an effort to clear up the which-one-will-survive-fresh-water issues with Bumblebee Gobies, and other things, I wrote this article recently:

Ten Things To Know About Bumblebee Gobies

Quick Summary

Whole black stripes with no breaks or spots = freshwater tolerant
Black stripes with breaks or spots = very freshwater intolerant!

This is on Aquarticles. The original hosting source is linked also, but its of little importance right now ;) My Bumblebee Gobies tend to eat only bloodworm and daphnia. Weve tried other foods, but with little luck. Their permanant grumpyness is probably the cause. When theyre getting used to the tank, feed as many foods as possible. Any foods ignored completely dont try again, any foods accepted readily dont try for a while, and any foods that theyre curious in and try a little of you should use most often. This means that when theyre fully used to their home, they will have a wider range of tastes and a better diet.
 
Im glad it was of use! Good to know youve got the tolerant fish too ;)
 
Good it sounds like mine are tolerant ones too!
Thanks for that and also teh feeding hints .. will try the bloodworm again
 
MTS .... good article!
So is it best to keep a community tank of Gobies rather than them in with other fish?
 
I would recommend that yeah. In my experience so far Gobies can be kept in brackish water happily with a Figure 8 puffer... this is however something of a "specialist fish" and considered (and is actually) quite difficult to keep when compared to the typical tropical assortment (Danios, Tetras etc). In fresh water though, there should be no problem with keeping Bumblebee Gobies in with, say, Neon Tetras, Cardinal Tetras, Ember Tetras, Black Tetras, Harlequin Rasboras.... practically anything really. The only things to consider are these:
  • If there are too many fish in the tank, even if it obeys the inch of fish per US gallon rule, then the Gboies will be given more opportunity to nip fins and attack passers by, so understocking is preferred for everyones stress levels, including your own.
  • Fish with frilly fins or long bits (Gourami for example) are also likely to be "cropped" by the gobies if they are an easy target for the Gobies.
As long as you stock you tank with these two things in consideration, there realy shouldnt be any problem with housing freshwater tolerant Bumblebee Gobies in with a freshwater tropical community :)

Also: housing with a Betta = big no no.
 
Thank you for your help you seem to know your stuff! I have just fed my Goby with a current as you suggested (normally switch filter off but left it on this time) and it worked !! he was dashing around grabbing the stuff!
 
Congratulations on your success! There are few things funner than a tiny Bumblebee Goby attacking a bloodowrm :D Those things will stick out of their mouths for ages until they can fit them in properly ;D

Nice work.
 
My bumbleebees are in fresh water. According to a gobiologist (fish scientist) friend of mine, there's a lot of misunderstanding about these fish. For one thing, Hypogymnogobius xanthozona doesn't exist in the trade. They are exceptionally rare in the wild (apparently most museums don't even have them). So forget about that name, or its synonym, Brachygobius xanthozona. Any references to that fish in the books are wrong.

The ones that are traded include Brachygobius sabanus and Brachygobius doriae. Identifying any of them to species level is something gobiologists do with dead specimens because you need to count fin rays, rows of scales, and things like that to be certain. Essentially impossible to tell apart in aquaria regardless of the photographs you see in books (which are often, I am assured, wrong).

Anyway, the commonly traded ones do equally well in fresh or very slightly brackish water. Salt is NOT essential, though some aquarists have found it helps for them. I don't use salt, and my bumblebees are big and very, very fat. The water in my tank is hard and alkaline, and the gobies coexist with other gobies, a South American puffer, halfbeaks, and a few other peaceful fish. The important thing is that they get some food.

Mine love (and I mean LOVE) shrimp eggs scraped from the bellies of coldwater prawns. They will eat these until the explode. Lobster eggs, which you can by as food for marine fish at your tropical fish store, make a reasonable substitute. My gobies will eat some bloodworms, but aren't wild about small crustaceans like mysids or brine shrimp. They do like tiny pieces of cooked prawn, so I keep a bag of these in the freezer at all times.

These fish like hiding places, so I use lots of plants and leave some of the dead leaves in the tank just for them.

Check out Frank Schäfer's AQUAlog book on Brackish Water Fishes if you can. It has an excellent chapter on gobies.

Cheers,

Neale

Here's one female of whatever species I have...

Brachygobius.jpg
 

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