Gold Head Sleeper Goby Fish (Valenciennea strigata)

Gold Head Sleeper Goby - Valenciennea strigata

Medium (2.25-3.5")
$52.99
Sale price  $52.99 Regular price 
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Gold Head Sleeper Goby Fish (Valenciennea strigata)

Gold Head Sleeper Goby - Valenciennea strigata

$52.99
Sale price  $52.99 Regular price 

Goes well with:

Valenciennea strigata

Care Level Easy
Temperament Peaceful
Reef Safe Yes
Max Size 6 inches
Tank Size 40 gallons
Diet Carnivore
Common Name Banded Sleeper Goby
Origin Fiji

Food

Pellets Mysis Finely Chopped Seafood

Tags

Goby Reef Safe Carnivore Sand Sifter

Diet & Feeding

The Banded Sleeper Goby is primarily a carnivore, feeding on small invertebrates and zooplankton in the wild. In captivity, it should be provided with a varied diet to ensure proper nutrition. Offer a mix of live, frozen, and freeze-dried foods such as brine shrimp, mysis shrimp, and finely chopped seafood. Supplement their diet with high-quality marine pellets or flakes. Feed them twice daily, ensuring that food reaches the bottom of the tank where they typically forage. Monitor their feeding habits to prevent overfeeding and maintain a healthy weight.

Behavior

Banded Sleeper Gobies are bottom-dwellers, often resting on substrate. They exhibit a calm swimming style, typically moving slowly. Socially, they are solitary but may tolerate conspecifics in large tanks. Territorial behavior is mild; they defend small areas but are generally peaceful. Compatibility with other fish is high, as they rarely initiate aggression. They coexist well with non-aggressive species and are best kept with similar-sized tank mates to avoid intimidation.

FAQs

My banded sleeper goby keeps spitting sand all over my corals and rocks in my reef tank. Is this normal, and how can I limit the mess without stressing the fish?
It’s completely normal. Banded sleeper gobies are constant sand sifters, taking mouthfuls of substrate, filtering out food, and expelling sand through their gills and mouth. To limit the mess, use a slightly coarser sand (not sharp crushed coral) in the main display so it falls quickly, and add fine sand in a lower-flow area or refugium if needed. Place corals higher on the rockwork and avoid putting fleshy LPS or zoas on the sand bed. Aim powerheads so they don’t blast right across the sand where the goby feeds, and provide a few low rock overhangs so it spends more time sifting in predictable zones instead of all over the tank.
My banded sleeper goby is getting thin even though I feed my fish twice a day. What specific foods and feeding methods does this species need to maintain weight?
Many banded sleeper gobies starve in captivity because the sand bed alone doesn’t have enough microfauna. Along with a mature, “alive” sand bed, target foods that sink and are small enough to be sifted: enriched frozen mysis, finely chopped krill, enriched brine (as a supplement only), and high-quality sinking marine pellets. Turn off flow briefly and broadcast these foods across the sand so they settle where the goby can sift them. Feed at least twice a day; three smaller meals are better for thin specimens. Avoid relying only on water-column feeding for other fish—your goby must find food in or on the substrate. If it’s very skinny, feed heavier for a few weeks while monitoring nutrients.
My banded sleeper goby keeps jumping into my overflow and has already ended up on the floor once. Why do they jump so much, and what is the best way to secure the tank specifically for this species?
Banded sleeper gobies are notorious jumpers, especially when newly introduced or startled by tankmates or sudden lights. They can launch straight through surprisingly small gaps. Use a tight-fitting lid made from clear mesh with no gaps larger than about 6 mm (1/4"). Cover overflows with mesh or acrylic combs, and block all small gaps around plumbing and light mounts. Dim the lights at “sunrise” and “sunset” instead of going full on/off instantly, and introduce the goby with the main lights dimmed and tank mates well fed to reduce initial stress. Provide a shallow sand bed near rockwork where it can quickly dive if spooked instead of bolting upward.
I added a banded sleeper goby to help clean my sand, but now parts of the sand bed look patchy and bare while other areas are still dirty. How can I encourage it to sift the entire substrate more evenly?
Banded sleeper gobies tend to work zones based on where they feel secure and where food density is highest. If it only uses one area, rearrange some rock to break up “walls” and give it more open yet sheltered routes across the front of the tank. Reduce aggressive or fast-swimming bottom dwellers (like some wrasses or dottybacks) that may be chasing it back to one corner. Adjust flow so there’s moderate, even circulation over the whole sand bed rather than one high-flow and one dead zone; that keeps detritus more evenly distributed, which encourages the goby to forage further. Finally, when feeding sinking foods, spread them across the areas you want cleaned instead of in just one spot—this often trains the fish to widen its working range.
Are banded sleeper gobies safe with small ornamental inverts like sexy shrimp and tiny hermits, and how does their sand-sifting behavior impact these invertebrates?
Banded sleeper gobies are generally safe with most mobile inverts and are more focused on tiny worms, copepods, and organic particles in the sand than on visible shrimp or crabs. They may, however, accidentally bury very small inverts or dislodge them when they eject sand. Tiny hermits and small nassarius snails usually cope well and simply re-emerge. Sexy shrimp and similar small, delicate shrimp are best kept off the sand on rock structures where the goby is less active. Avoid keeping burrowing pistol shrimp in the same small tank, as the goby’s constant sand movement can collapse burrows, causing stress to both animals.
Description
You will receive a fish SIMILAR in design and size to the fish in the photo. This is NOT a WYSIWYG fish.

Gold Head Sleeper Goby (Valenciennea strigata)

The Gold Head Sleeper Goby is a peaceful, sand-sifting bottom-dweller prized for its vibrant golden-yellow head and sleek, silvery-white body. Constantly at work sifting sand through its gills, this goby adds both beauty and utility to reef aquariums—helping to aerate the substrate and reduce detritus buildup.

Tank Requirements

Gold Head Sleeper Gobies thrive in aquariums of 40 gallons or more, with a deep sand bed and plenty of open bottom space for foraging. They also appreciate stable rockwork with hiding spots where they can rest or retreat. A tight-fitting lid is essential, as they are known jumpers.

Natural Sand Sifters

These gobies spend most of their time scooping up mouthfuls of sand, filtering out food particles and detritus as the sand exits through their gills. This behavior makes them valuable members of the aquarium's cleanup crew, helping to maintain a clean and oxygenated substrate.

Diet and Feeding

While they naturally feed on microorganisms and organic matter in the sand, supplemental feeding is important, especially in newer or less mature tanks. Offer a varied carnivorous diet including mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, finely chopped seafood, and sinking meaty pellets or frozen blends to ensure proper nutrition.

Tankmates and Behavior

Gold Head Sleeper Gobies are peaceful and reef-safe, making them excellent additions to community tanks. They may become territorial toward other sand-sifting gobies if space is limited, so it's best to keep only one per tank unless they are a confirmed mated pair. They do not bother corals or invertebrates.

SKU: GOBYxGoldHeadM

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