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Synchiropus splendidus

Biota Green Mandarin (Tank Raised)

    $144.95

    One of the more beautiful additions to any aquarium. Can be challenging to keep.

    SKU: F-31501

    Out of stock

      This item is exempt from our free shipping policy

      Dragonets are enchanting fish; however they are dependent upon live food and are best reserved for experienced aquarists. Their close relatives the scooters are much easier to keep and typically learn to eat frozen food on the substrate. Aggressive tank mates should be avoided. Care should be exercised when transferring this fish in a net as its large cheek spines may become tangled. They spend their days sneaking through the rockwork and over the substrate, and may bury in the sand at night or when frightened. They are prone to accidentally swimming into anemones and being eaten. Males have larger first dorsal fins than females.

      Dragonets are hunters of tiny shrimp-like copepods, and they must eat huge numbers of them in order to retain their healthy rotund appearance. Although dragonets are small fish we recommend a well established aquarium of no less than 50 gallons, and preferably larger. Scooters may be kept in as small as 20 gallons if they are feeding well on prepared foods. A refugium is helpful in supplementing the main aquarium with live prey items. Macroalgae may also be kept directly in the aquarium, and feeding of Phytoplankton may encourage copepods to reproduce faster. Tigger pods are a popular first food which this fish finds irresistible.

      Fish who directly compete with the dragonet for food should be avoided, primarily sleeper gobies. It should be offered frozen food items such as Calanus, Mysis and enriched brine shrimp on the sand several times a day.

      One of the ocean's most charming fish, the Mandarin Dragonet may also be one of the most beautiful. Its deep orange body is decorated with swirling patterns of emerald green. Its cheeks are pale cream which dissipates into tiny freckles on its throat. Its large pectoral fins may be green to blue and are in a constant undulating motion; it uses its pelvic fins to rest on the substrate. It may be kept alone or in pairs if the fish are added together or female first. Two males should never be kept together. The Mandarin Dragonet grows to 3 inches.

      Customer Reviews

      Based on 3 reviews
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      Harsha Jayasekera
      So far so good!

      Been reefing for 7 years and one of the reason I got into saltwater was to keep a mandarin. But with a 20g that seemed impossible. After hearing about these guys I had to have one. Mine came in at a little over an inch. He's been in the tank for 2 1/2 weeks and he's already grown at least .25 inches and very visibly fatter. I feed the tank the Biota recommended TDO B2 pellet 3 times a day. I've seen him picking at them one or twice but he's constantly nipping on something, no idea what. I even have a copepod boom in my tank, so maybe he's ignoring them?

      They are pricy but worth it, very happy with the purchase and appreciate the J&L staff (Chantell, John) for helping me get one.

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      Anna Brezhneva
      The best!

      I'm more than happy with Biota green mandarin baby that was purchased a year ago. Despite the small size, it was eating fry starter powder on day 1, and it doubled in size in 2 months when it developed an interest in frozen foods that other fish were eating in the same tank. This male is not shy and is always wandering around the tank, being friendly with other fish. The best part is that you can watch them grow from a tiny baby to a gorgeous adult. Just feed frozen foods and enjoy. It's worth every penny!

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      Alan Perry
      Tiny!!!!

      These fish arrive smaller than 1/4" (3 to 5 mm) in size. I wrestled with the ethics of getting tank bred fish over wild caught, and opted to try the Biota. Unless you have a separate system or a breeding container to house these fish in; don't even bother. After 6 months of carefully hand feeding mine, she escaped the breeding enclosure I had her in and immediately disappeared in my refugium, never to be seen again (suspect due to her tiny size, she ended up getting through the screen on my skimmer intake...). Ridiculously priced for fish that arrive microscopic in size!

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