Elacatinus multifasciatus — greenbanded goby

Elacatinus multifasciatus (greenbanded goby): complete guide
Elacatinus multifasciatus beside live rock
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Elacatinus multifasciatus — greenbanded goby

📘 Reading time: calculating… 🗓 April 2026 🎭 nano + microfauna 🐟 cleaner goby

Elacatinus multifasciatus is tiny, shy, and highly dependent on context: live rock, calm tankmates, and small but real meals.

📌 Real risk
Tank size alone is not the issue. The real threats are immaturity, intimidation, and lack of visible feeding success.

Introduction

This is a great mature nano-reef species: discreet, useful, and very sensitive to overall tank calm.

Identification

Elacatinus multifasciatus detail
Visual signature — greenish bars and a reddish line from snout to dorsal area.
  • 2 to 3.5 cm.
  • Slender, elongated body.
  • Opportunistic cleaner role.

Biotope

Western Atlantic reefs and sandy shallows. In captivity it needs mature live rock and secure crevices.

Visual pattern

Its beauty is subtle rather than explosive: it rewards detailed observation and refined reef design.

Morphology

The narrow body lets it use cracks, rock edges, and microterritories that larger fish ignore.

Behavior

  • Short local movements.
  • Rock inspection.
  • Occasional interest in larger fish.
  • Constant hiding = poor sign.
  • Less feeding exposure = warning.
  • Jumping is possible when startled.

Setups

Volume

Under 50 L if stability is real.

Live rock

Core for shelter and microfauna.

Tankmates

Always peaceful.

Parameters

Parameter Range Reading
Temperature 24-26 °C Stability.
Salinity 1.024-1.026 Classic reef.
Maturity High Very important.

Feeding

It accepts mysis, brine shrimp, micro-prepared foods, and sometimes dry foods. The challenge is not variety but confirmed intake.

Compatibility

Excellent with corals and invertebrates; a poor match for large or dominant fish.

Comparison

Compared with many nano gobies, it depends more on microfauna, calm social context, and close behavioral reading.

BCS

Good condition means visible feeding and a fine but not sunken profile. Poor condition means thinning and chronic hiding.

Matrix

Tankmate Outlook Risk
Corals Excellent Low
Invertebrates Compatible Low
Aggressive fish No High

Buying

  • Ask what it already eats.
  • Choose visible, active specimens.
  • Do not add it to tanks ruled by intense fish.

Estimator

Risk rises quickly in immature tanks, with little microfauna, or with intimidating companions.

Glossary

Microfauna

Small natural food resource.

Cleaner

A fish that inspects others.

Nano reef

A small system that demands stability.

Breeding

Difficult and less documented than in more commonly bred species.

Health

Problems usually begin with social stress, poor food access, and repeated fright.

Myths vs facts

Being tiny does not mean it suits every nano tank.

Mistakes

  • Relying only on spontaneous microfauna.
  • Leaving the tank uncovered.
  • Underestimating its short lifespan.

Checklist

  • Is my system mature?
  • Are the tankmates peaceful?
  • Do I know what it eats?

Evidence

Very small species depend more strongly on microhabitat, structural refuge, and social competition control.

Reading

«Elacatinus multifasciatus proves that small size does not reduce difficulty; it makes it finer.»

— atlasreef

FAQ — Elacatinus multifasciatus

Is it suitable for nano aquariums?

Yes, if the system is stable and calm.

Is it a cleaner fish?

Yes, it can show cleaning behavior.

Does it accept dry food?

Many specimens do, but confirm it first.

Closing

With live rock, small meals, and a kind community, it returns subtle, useful, elegant presence.

Images: AtlasReef Media Library.

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