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Continue ShoppingWheeler’s Watchman Goby
Care Level: Easy to Moderate
Diet: Carnivore
Temperament: Peaceful, Territorial With Similar Gobies
Reef-Safe: Yes
Venomous/Toxic: No
Approximate Purchase Size: 1-3"
Approximate Max Size: Around 3-4"
Recommended Tank Size: 20-30 Gallons or Larger
The Wheeler’s Watchman Goby (Amblyeleotris wheeleri), also known as the Wheeler’s Shrimp Goby or Gorgeous Prawn Goby, is a peaceful bottom-dwelling reef fish known for its pale body, orange to reddish bands, blue spotting, and watchful burrow-guarding behavior. It is one of the more attractive shrimp gobies, which is nice because apparently even tiny sandbed fish need designer markings now.
Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies spend much of their time perched near a burrow entrance, watching the aquarium and retreating quickly when startled. They are generally peaceful with most community fish but may defend their burrow or territory from similar gobies. Like many shrimp gobies, they may pair with compatible pistol shrimp, creating one of the most entertaining partnerships in reef aquariums.
This species is considered reef-safe and should not bother corals or most invertebrates. It may dig, move small amounts of sand, or use rubble around its burrow, so low-placed frags should be secured. Reef-safe does not always mean sandbed-safe, because apparently every goby comes with a tiny landscaping agenda.
Note: Image is a representation of what to expect. The fish you receive may vary slightly in size, color, banding, spotting, and overall appearance.
A minimum tank size of 20 gallons or larger can work for a single Wheeler’s Watchman Goby, though 30 gallons or larger is preferred for better stability, more bottom space, and community tank setups.
The aquarium footprint matters more than height because this fish spends most of its time near the bottom. A wider aquarium with sand, rockwork, and usable territory is more helpful than a tall narrow tank filled with vertical water it has no intention of appreciating.
Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies do best in established aquariums with live rock, sandy substrate, stable rockwork, and secure hiding places.
Aquascaping: Provide live rock, caves, ledges, and open sandbed areas. Rockwork should be stable and placed securely, not balanced loosely on sand. Shrimp gobies and pistol shrimp can dig around rock bases, and gravity remains a humorless little monster.
Substrate: Fine sand or soft aragonite is recommended. A mix of sand and small rubble pieces can help the goby or pistol shrimp build and reinforce burrows.
Rockwork: Live rock is strongly recommended. It provides shelter, biological filtration, territory, and structure around burrow entrances.
Pistol Shrimp Pairing: Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies may pair with compatible pistol shrimp, especially species in the Alpheus genus. Pairing is not guaranteed, but when it happens, it creates a fascinating burrow-sharing relationship where the shrimp digs and the goby acts like a tiny suspicious security camera.
Tank Maturity: A mature aquarium is preferred. Stable biological filtration and consistent water quality help this burrow-dwelling fish settle in and feed reliably.
Tank Cover: A tight-fitting lid is strongly recommended. Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies can jump when startled, because apparently the emergency exit is always upward.
Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies are generally hardy once established, but they still need clean, stable marine conditions. “Hardy goby” does not mean “compatible with mystery water,” though the hobby does enjoy testing that tragic theory.
Temperature: 72-78°F
pH Level: 8.1-8.4
Salinity: 1.020-1.026 specific gravity
Ammonia, Nitrite, and Nitrate: Ammonia and nitrite should remain undetectable. Nitrate should be kept as low as reasonably possible, ideally below 20 ppm.
Water Flow: Low to moderate flow is ideal near the sandbed. Provide enough movement to keep the aquarium oxygenated and move waste toward filtration, while still allowing calmer areas near the goby’s burrow.
Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies are carnivores that should be offered a varied diet of small meaty marine foods. They usually accept frozen and prepared foods once settled, especially if food reaches the bottom of the aquarium near their burrow.
Frozen Food: Offer mysis shrimp, enriched brine shrimp, cyclops, chopped clam, marine blends, and other small meaty frozen foods. We at Summit City Coral prefer frozen foods such as LRS Reef Frenzy and PE Mysis.
Prepared Foods: High-quality sinking pellets, carnivore pellets, and small marine pellets can help provide balanced nutrition. Sinking foods are especially useful because this fish spends most of its time near the bottom.
Live Foods: Copepods, amphipods, live brine shrimp, blackworms, and other small live foods can help encourage feeding, especially in newly introduced or shy individuals.
Small Meaty Foods: Finely chopped seafood and small crustacean-based foods can be offered in rotation. Avoid oversized foods unless you enjoy watching a goby stare at dinner like it has been handed a mortgage document.
Feed small amounts 1-2 times per day, or 2-3 times per day for new or shy individuals. Make sure food reaches the goby near its burrow or bottom territory, especially in tanks with faster fish that treat feeding time like a doorbuster sale.
Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies are peaceful with most community fish and work well in reef aquariums. They may defend their burrow from similar gobies, especially in smaller tanks.
Fish: Clownfish, cardinalfish, firefish, blennies, peaceful wrasses, chromis, dwarf angelfish, tangs in larger aquariums, and other peaceful to semi-peaceful reef fish.
Avoid: Large predatory fish, aggressive dottybacks, aggressive damsels, triggers, groupers, lionfish, hawkfish large enough to eat them, and any fish likely to bully or swallow them.
Similar Gobies: Use caution with other shrimp gobies, watchman gobies, or similar bottom-dwelling species unless the aquarium is large enough to provide separate territories.
Pistol Shrimp: May pair with compatible pistol shrimp. Pairing is not guaranteed, but it can create a fascinating burrow-sharing relationship.
Invertebrates: Usually safe with cleaner shrimp, hermit crabs, snails, urchins, and most common reef invertebrates. Very tiny ornamental shrimp or crustaceans may be at some risk from larger individuals.
Coral: Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies are considered reef-safe and should not bother soft corals, LPS, SPS, zoanthids, mushrooms, clams, or anemones. They may move sand near low-placed frags because apparently substrate must be redistributed by committee.
Temperament: Peaceful overall, but may become territorial around its burrow.
Burrowing Behavior: Often uses a burrow under rockwork or near caves. Provide stable rockwork and suitable substrate.
Pistol Shrimp Relationship: May form a symbiotic pair with compatible pistol shrimp. The shrimp digs and maintains the burrow while the goby watches for danger.
Perching Behavior: Frequently sits at the burrow entrance or on nearby sand and rockwork, watching the aquarium with intense little goby suspicion.
Reef Compatibility: Excellent for reef tanks. They generally ignore corals and most invertebrates.
Territoriality: May be aggressive toward similar gobies, especially other shrimp gobies or watchman gobies in smaller aquariums.
Sand Movement: May move sand or rubble while using or maintaining a burrow. This is normal behavior, not a personal attack on your aquascape, although the visual result may feel targeted.
Feeding Behavior: Usually accepts frozen and prepared foods once settled. Offer food near the bottom so it does not get outcompeted by faster fish.
Coloration: Typically pale with orange to reddish bands, blue spotting, and attractive facial markings. Color intensity may vary depending on stress, age, lighting, and collection location.
Jumping: A tight-fitting lid is strongly recommended. Wheeler’s Watchman Gobies can dart upward when startled, because apparently panic has poor directional awareness.
This acclimation method helps reduce stress by gradually introducing the fish to your aquarium’s temperature and water chemistry.
Turn off aquarium lights to reduce stress. If you have an Auto Top Off system, switch it off before starting acclimation.
Float the sealed bag in the aquarium for 15-20 minutes to allow the temperature in the bag to equalize with the tank.
Carefully open the bag and transfer the fish and shipping water into a clean bucket or container.
Add 1/4 cup of tank water to the container every 5 minutes for 40 minutes.
Once acclimation is complete, gently transfer the fish into the aquarium using a net or specimen container. Discard the shipping water. Do not pour shipping water into your aquarium.
You may need to replace the saltwater removed during acclimation with fresh mixed saltwater.
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