Valenciennea sexguttata (sixspot sleeper goby)

Valenciennea sexguttata (sixspot sleeper goby): complete guide
Valenciennea sexguttata over pale sand in a marine aquarium
Official translations » Spanish English Português (Brasil) Deutsch Français Italiano

Valenciennea sexguttata — sixspot sleeper goby

📘 Reading time: calculating… 🗓 April 2026 🎭 substrate + sifting 🐟 real-world care

Valenciennea sexguttata is an elegant, useful benthic goby, but it only truly shines when the aquarium is designed from the substrate upward: functional sand, stable shelter, and real access to food.

📌 Real risk
It rarely fails because of extreme chemistry. It fails when functional sand, biological maturity, and feeding logistics are missing.

Introduction

This fish turns the bottom into its living center. It is not just a sand-moving goby: it filters, selects, explores, and reads the substrate for much of the day.

AtlasReef key idea: if the sand is not functional, this species never truly looks right even when the water is perfect.

Identification

Valenciennea sexguttata side view
Key trait — six bluish dots on the head and a dark mark on the tail fin.
  • Scientific name: Valenciennea sexguttata.
  • Typical size: 12 to 14 cm.
  • Elongated body and clearly benthic life.
  • Limited open-water swimming due to lack of a functional swim bladder.

Biotope

It comes from the Indo-Pacific, from the Red Sea to Australia, on sandy bottoms associated with shallow reefs. In aquariums this translates into broad sand, solid shelter, and base stability.

Visual pattern

Head dots

The clearest identification signal.

Tail mark

Helps distinguish the species quickly.

Pale livery

Fits perfectly over bright open sand.

Morphology

It takes sand into the mouth and expels it through the gills while retaining useful particles, microfauna, and edible remains. Its shape is not built for speed but for steady bottom work.

Behavior

Normal pattern

  • Frequent substrate sifting.
  • Slow movement across the tank base.
  • Use of low-rock shelters.

Warning signs

  • Less sand filtering.
  • Sunken abdomen.
  • Constant hiding.

Setups

Volume

At least 200 liters for range and stability.

Sand

Broad, alive, and deep enough to matter.

Rock

Securely seated before substrate is added.

Parameters

ParameterRangeReading
Temperature24-26 °CStability comes first.
Salinity1.024-1.026Classic reef range.
OxygenationHighImportant because of bottom activity.

Feeding

It accepts brine shrimp, mysis, fish flesh, and sometimes dry food, but the real challenge is making sure it eats enough against faster tankmates.

Compatibility

Peaceful with corals and calm fish. Delicate with very fast fish and with other bottom gobies in limited space.

Comparison

AspectV. sexguttataClassic goby
Substrate useCentralVariable
Food competitionHighMedium
Impact on sandVery highLow to medium

BCS

Good condition means a full abdomen, regular sifting, and visible presence. Poor condition means thinning, less filtering, and more hiding.

Matrix

TankmateOutlookRisk
CoralsCompatible Low
Peaceful fishViable Medium
Aggressive fishBad idea High

Buying

  • Choose specimens that already sift actively.
  • Avoid sharply sunken bellies.
  • Add only to mature systems.

Estimator

Poor sand, high food competition, and undersized tanks greatly increase the real failure risk.

Glossary

Sifting

Filtering sand through the mouth.

Microfauna

Tiny substrate organisms.

Benthic

Bottom-associated.

Breeding

Very difficult; the practical focus remains husbandry and body-condition reading.

Health

Problems usually begin with slow underfeeding, poor substrate, or background stress.

Myths vs facts

It is not enough that the fish physically fits the tank. It needs context, useful sand, and real food access.

Mistakes

  • Immature aquarium.
  • Too little sand area.
  • Unstable rockwork.
  • Ignoring food competition.

Checklist

  • Do I have 200 L with useful sand?
  • Is my system mature?
  • Can I target-feed if needed?

Evidence

This species confirms a simple idea: substrate is a feeding resource, working space, and early health signal.

Reading

«Valenciennea sexguttata shows whether your sand bed is an ecosystem or just decoration.»

— atlasreef

FAQ — Valenciennea sexguttata

Is it good for cleaning sand?

Yes, but that does not replace a mature bed or serious maintenance.

Does it accept prepared food?

Usually yes, but actual intake still has to be confirmed.

Can I keep two together?

Only with generous space and planning.

Closing

If the substrate is alive and the system is stable, this species brings useful movement, bottom-level feedback, and elegance. Without that base, it declines quietly.

Images: AtlasReef Media Library.

Deja un comentario

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *

Translate »
Scroll al inicio