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spotted mandarin

Printed From: Utah Reefs
Category: Specialized Discussion
Forum Name: Fish
Forum Description: This is the place to ask questions about fish.
URL: http://www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=12715
Printed Date: July 10 2026 at 8:17am
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Topic: spotted mandarin
Posted By: Ryan Thompson
Subject: spotted mandarin
Date Posted: June 12 2006 at 3:19pm
ok so i want to take a step up in the fish world and try a mandarin. to be exact a spotted mandarin. my tank is about 14 weeks old and has rock that is well over 2 years old. am i safe to get the mandarin yet? do you guys think my tank has enough food for the mandarin to eat?



Replies:
Posted By: aaaj
Date Posted: June 12 2006 at 3:27pm
I personally put one in after getting an established tank and waiting about 3-4 month and he's doing well.  I went with a spotted mandarin, and got the smallest one I could find.  I also watch him really close and will feed live food if I ever see him hovering at all, (hasn't happened for a few months) and I have alot of macro in the sump, and a few sponges floating to help the pods.  This has worked for me, but in general it is betting to wait longer.  If you can be really dedicated I'm sure you can make it work.

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Amber
29 gallon reef
pictures of some of my frags at frags.org


Posted By: kgwilliams
Date Posted: June 12 2006 at 6:35pm
I had one for quite a while until my anemone got him.  My tank wasn't very old when I got him, but I got lucky because he would eat frozen brine.  Most of them will only eat live foods, which makes them harder to keep.  If you were willing to feed some type of live food, then I'm sure you could make it work.  That's my favorite fish!  I'm thinking about getting another one!

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75gal reef /sump/ref 150MH 2 96w CF
Perhaps I would be better at basket weaving. . . at least it would be cheaper!


Posted By: tileman
Date Posted: June 12 2006 at 6:45pm
You should wait at least 6 months for your tank to establish more before adding a manderin goby

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335G Reef
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Posted By: sukie
Date Posted: June 12 2006 at 10:34pm
I agree w/ tileman! 6mos!  I know I want one but some might not eat frozen goods like kgwilliams.  Tons of pods!!! I'm waiting for a year or two before I get mine!!  Thumbs Up

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http://sukie.mt-wudan.com/ - My Blog


Posted By: ReefBones
Date Posted: June 12 2006 at 10:52pm
Yup I agree with Sukie ... I am 5 months and counting ... I really really want one .. but I will not add one untill my tank is atleast 1 to 1.5 yours old ....

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140 gallon Reef
65 gallon Reef
55 gallon Aggressive

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Posted By: Dion Richins
Date Posted: June 12 2006 at 11:02pm
It is STRONGLY recommended for a minimum of 100G and 1-1.5y old. Most of us have done with smaller tanks but only with the luck of a Mandarin that eats frozen.

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Posted By: Mark Peterson
Date Posted: June 13 2006 at 8:13am
Originally posted by kgwilliams kgwilliams wrote:

I had one for quite a while until my anemone got him.  My tank wasn't very old when I got him, but I got lucky because he would eat frozen brine.  
  I'm thinking about getting another one!
 
Sorry, but the truth is: That Mandarin was only barely keeping itself alive on frozen brine shrimp. Eventually it declined until it was too weak to care or to get away from one anemone tentacle which dragged it closer until more tentacles latched on and pulled it in. With only one exception, which Adam may tell us about, a healthy fish cannot get captured and eaten by an anemone. Sorry, but you should stay away from Mandarins for that tank.


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Posted By: Kevin F
Date Posted: June 13 2006 at 9:56am
IME I think that if you attached a refugium to your system, and purchased a pod culture for your tank you could add a manderin in a month or so.

The reason everyon suggests large tanks is so thereis ample room for the pods to breed without there populations being decimated by the manderins feeding habits. If you give the pods a place to breed where they can not be directly effected by the eating manderin, your pod population will fair much better.

I have kept spotted manderins in tanks ranging from 18 to 75g all with succsess.


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The mediocre mind is incapable of understanding the man who refuses to bow blindly to conventional prejudices and chooses instead to express his opinions courageously and honestly. Albert Einstein


Posted By: Gahlenfr
Date Posted: June 13 2006 at 11:32am

Unfortunately Kevin, most people will read your last sentence and say great, I can do that too.  I agree with you but how many are going to go to that extent to keep 1 fish?  Be patient.  Even doing what Kevin suggests takes time.



Posted By: Ryan Thompson
Date Posted: June 13 2006 at 1:30pm
yes i have a refugium that has a pretty good pod population but i dont know how good. i might do it i might not. is a scooter blenny ok right now? i have read they are difficult to keep but they also say copperbands are hard to keep. i have kept my copperband now for about 3 weeks. it loves to eat shrimp!


Posted By: kgwilliams
Date Posted: June 13 2006 at 9:16pm
Mark- you may be right about the anemone theory.  All I know is that he was fat and happy one day, and dead the next.  And none of my other fish had any problems.  And come to find out I even had a pods in my tank, I just didn't realize it until the mandarin died and the population grew.
 
Anyways, rtparty, I really like my red scooter blenny!  I don't think that they are really that hard to keep, mine eats frozen brine.  Just make sure you don't have anything else in your tank that will pick on it.  My bicolor psuedochromis gives mine hell, it's really starting to bother "scooter", you can tell he's stressed.  That's one fish I will never suggest. . . psuedochromis.  They are bullys!


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75gal reef /sump/ref 150MH 2 96w CF
Perhaps I would be better at basket weaving. . . at least it would be cheaper!


Posted By: Mark Peterson
Date Posted: June 13 2006 at 10:43pm

The Scooter Blenny and the Mandarin have almost exactly the same eating habits. It would cause starvation to place both in a single tank without ensuring sufficient small bugs for their nutritional needs.

That Pseudochromis is a bully partly because of it's nature, but perhaps even more so because it is competing for the same food as the Scooter Blenny.
 
The article Herbivores versus Carnivores in the June 2001 SeaStar Online is very informative with regard to all this. Here is the link: http://www.utahreefs.com/SeaStar/SeaStarJunePrint.pdf - http://www.utahreefs.com/SeaStar/SeaStarJunePrint.pdf


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Reefkeeping Tips, & quick, easy setup tricks:
www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=9244
Pay it forward - become a paid WMAS member


Posted By: Ryan Thompson
Date Posted: June 14 2006 at 1:42pm
well i wont get both. i will either get a scooter or a mandarin. which one will have the better chance in my tank?


Posted By: sukie
Date Posted: June 14 2006 at 2:20pm
My best-est most honest advice is wait on either. . . . but if you want to speed up the process I think you can buy more pods and put them in your refugium and wait a couple months.  If you got a huge number then get one. 
Or just wait 6mos-1yr and get one then.  Thumbs Up


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http://sukie.mt-wudan.com/ - My Blog


Posted By: Ryan Thompson
Date Posted: June 22 2006 at 3:55pm
ok so i got the scooter blenny. so far he is doing good. he has been in for one day so you cant tell anything really right now. i see him grazing on the rocks. i just hope it eats shrimp now that he has been moved. thanks for all your advice



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