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FishMarineIntermediate

Curated catalog

Diamond watchman goby

Valenciennea puellaris

Diamond watchman goby: marine fish in the family Gobiidae, selected for reef or fish-only aquariums for color, behavior, and tank role.

Family
Gobiidae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

24 °C - 27 °C

pH

8 - 8.4

Water type

Marine

Tank level

Rocce vive e colonna libera

Adult size

15 cm

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

The Diamond Watchman Goby (*Valenciennea puellaris*), also known as the Diamond Sleeper Goby, is a highly industrious marine teleost natively endemic to the warm, shallow coastal reefs, sandy lagoons, and rubble zones of the Indo-Pacific (from the Red Sea to Samoa). Their natural biotope is defined strictly by expansive, deep sandy substrates adjacent to coral outcroppings. They spend their entire lives on the ocean floor, functioning as relentless biological excavators and vital substrate aerators.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Gobiidae (Goby) family, they are robustly built and relatively large for a goby. Fully mature adults reach 12.0 to 15.0 centimeters (4.7-6.0 inches) in total length. They possess a classic, torpedo-shaped, bottom-dwelling morphology. Their most critical physical adaptation is their massive, shovel-like mouth, which is specifically designed to scoop up large mouthfuls of sand, sifting it through their gills to extract microscopic prey.

Social Behavior:

They are peaceful, highly active, and obsessively driven diggers. Unlike perching gobies, they are in constant motion during daylight hours. They tirelessly bulldoze across the substrate, taking massive scoops of sand into their mouths, filtering out food, and expelling the clean sand out of their gill plates. They construct deep, complex burrows under rocks for sleeping and protection. They are generally peaceful toward heterospecifics but can be fiercely territorial toward other sand-sifting gobies.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is visually non-existent. Their coloration is beautiful and highly functional for sandy camouflage. The body base is a pristine, stark white. This white canvas is heavily decorated with prominent, vibrant neon-orange to rust-colored spots and horizontal dashes running along the lateral line. Their cheeks and gill covers are marked with striking, iridescent pale blue dashes, giving them the "diamond" moniker.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST accommodate their absolute biological need to sift sand. A minimum 150-liter (40-gallon) marine aquarium is required. CRITICAL REQUIREMENT: The tank MUST possess a deep sand bed (at least 2-3 inches deep) of fine-grained aragonite sand. Coarse crushed coral will lethally lacerate their delicate gills. All heavy rockwork MUST be securely placed on the glass bottom before sand is added to prevent catastrophic avalanches when the goby excavates beneath them.

Diet & Feeding:

They are relentless micro-carnivores (benthic zooplanktivores). In the wild, they survive entirely by sifting copepods, small worms, and crustaceans from the sand. CRITICAL WARNING: They are notoriously prone to agonizing starvation in captivity if the sand bed is "sterile" or too small. While they will clean the sand, their diet MUST be heavily supplemented with sinking meaty foods (Mysis shrimp, enriched brine shrimp, bloodworms) fed directly to the bottom 2-3 times daily to maintain body weight.

Water Quality:

Originating from pristine Indo-Pacific reefs, they are relatively hardy once established but require stable marine parameters. They demand stable tropical heat (24-27°C / 75-81°F). Specific gravity (salinity) MUST be maintained strictly between 1.020 and 1.025. They require hard, highly alkaline water (pH 8.1 - 8.4) and a well-oxygenated environment. They do not require massive water flow, but a moderate current helps keep detritus suspended while the goby constantly overturns the sand bed.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is universally excellent for peaceful community reef tanks. They are 100% reef-safe and completely ignore corals, though their constant sand-sifting may occasionally drop sand onto corals placed directly on the substrate. They are fantastic companions for Clownfish, Blennies, Firefish, and Tangs. They MUST NEVER be housed with massive, predatory bottom-dwellers (Hawkfish, Triggerfish) that will eat them. Do not house them with other sand-sifting gobies unless they are a mated pair.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding the Diamond Goby in captivity is exceptionally rare but possible. They form monogamous pairs and share a single deep burrow. The female lays a mass of highly adhesive, demersal eggs deep within the burrow, attaching them to the roof of a buried rock. The male fiercely guards the eggs until they hatch. Raising the microscopic, pelagic larvae is extraordinarily difficult and requires highly specialized rotifer cultures and immense dedication.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is catastrophic crushing; if live rock is stacked on top of the sand, the goby WILL dig underneath it, causing the rock to collapse and instantly crush the fish. The second major risk is lethal starvation; owners often assume they survive purely on "detritus" and fail to feed them directly, resulting in a sunken, emaciated belly and death. Finally, a completely tight, heavy lid is unconditionally mandatory, as they are notorious, powerful jumpers.

Fish profile

Temperament
Scava e setaccia sabbia; richiede fondo maturo
Diet
Mangime marino variato, surgelato e integrazione coerente con la dieta naturale
Tank level
Rocce vive e colonna libera
Minimum group
1
Adult size
15 cm
Minimum tank
250 L
GH
n/a
KH
n/a
TDS
n/a
Conductivity
n/a
Sex ratio
Singolo, coppia compatibile o gruppo secondo specie
Feeding frequency
1-2 volte al giorno in piccole porzioni
Bioload
Medium
Flow
Movimento marino moderato-forte con zone di riparo
Reproduction
Riproduzione in acquario possibile solo per alcune specie; gestione dedicata per larve marine.
Compatibility
Valutare territorialita, taglia adulta e compatibilita reef prima dell inserimento.

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Licensed observation photo from iNaturalist for Valenciennea puellaris.