Tailspot Blenny (Ecsenius stigmatura)

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Tailspot Blenny
Ecsenius stigmatura
Tailspot Blenny (Ecsenius stigmatura)
Name Tailspot Blenny
Name Lat. Ecsenius stigmatura
Family Combtooth Blennies
Family lat. Blenniidae
Order Blennies
Order lat. Blenniiformes
Origin Western Pacific
Habitat Lagoons, coral reefs
Diet Herbivore
pH 8.1-8.4
Hardness 8-10 °KH
Behavior Peaceful
Keeping Individual
Reef Compatible With caution
Care Level Moderate
Life Span N/A
Protection No
Metric Units
Size 6 cm
Temperature 22-26 °C
Salinity 33-36 ‰
Aquarium ~ 200 l
US Units
Size 2.4"
Temperature 72-79 °F
Salinity 1.020-1.025 sg
Aquarium ~ 50 gal

Distribution and habitat

The distribution range of Ecsenius stigmatura is in the western Pacific Ocean and extends from the Indonesian Moluccas to Papua New Guinea and the Philippines. They live individually or in small groups on outer reefs and in lagoons with rich coral growth down to 30 m depth.

Maintenance

They need a well-structured aquarium with a reef structure (hiding, resting and retreat possibilities), with living stones, which they can graze on and which act like a biological filter as well as a not too fine, deep substrate. Only lime-rich, heavy metal-free sands, gravels, stones or sea sand of various grain sizes may be used as substrate

Filters, skimmers and heaters are necessary to ensure water quality, as well as pumps to simulate tides, swells and bottom currents. Lighting must correspond to the species-appropriate day-night rhythm of the animals

Salinity: 33-36 ‰ pH value: 8.1-8.4
Carbonate hardness: 8-10 °KH Nitrate content: 2-8 mg/l
phosphate content: 0.01-0.1 mg/l nitrite content: 0.0-0.05 mg/l

For salinity, an average value should be aimed for, which may only vary slightly by +/- 0.5 ‰. Ammonia and ammonium must not be measurable. Special attention must be paid to constantly good water quality.

Diet

In nature they feed mainly on zooplankton and algae. The feed change usually succeeds without problems. The food supply should consist of a commercially available, vitamin-enriched, frozen special food mix for planktivores or live and frozen food such as mysis, artemia, bosmids, cyclops and plankton. In addition, they need plenty of commercially available algae and kelp (e.g. nori, caulerpa, kelp) supplemented with high-quality flake or granulated food for herbivores, which is usually accepted after an acclimation period. The plant food strengthens their immune system and reduces aggression

It is recommended to feed small portions several times a day (3-5 times). Regular and varied feeding promotes health and increases resistance.

Behaviour and compatibility

Basically they are peaceful and can be well socialized in a coral reef aquarium with other fish. Towards same-sex conspecifics, other blennies and smaller gobies they can be very territorial. Keeping several animals is only recommended in a larger and richly structured tank.

Sex dimorphism

Males are usually larger than females and change coloration during the breeding season.

Reproduction and breeding

A successful breeding in the aquarium is said to have succeeded several times.

Important

Well-run coral aquariums with abundant small fauna provide optimal conditions for keeping them. They are well suited for biological algae control.

As coral reef dwellers, they should not be kept in a fish-only aquarium.

If different species are kept together, care should be taken to ensure that the fish match each other in terms of water quality and temperature requirements and social behavior, and that the setup meets the needs of all species kept together. New fish to be introduced must be acclimated slowly to the water in the aquarium

Further literature can be found in your pet store.

References

Text: petdata; Image: Franz Lowak

Source: KUITER, DEBELIUS (2007): Atlas der Meeresfische: Die Fische an den Küsten der Weltmeere, Kosmos Verlag; BAENSCH & PATZNER (1998): Meerwasser Atlas Bd. 7, Mergus Verlag; ENGELMANN (2005): Zootierhaltung - Tiere in menschlicher Obhut: Fische, Verlag Harri Deutsch

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