
Overview
The Red Scooter Dragonet is a close relative of the more common Scooter Blenny, sharing the same mottled body pattern but with a warmer reddish-brown tone. Like other dragonets it perches on rock or sand, darting short distances to pick off small food items rather than swimming continuously.
It's peaceful, reef safe, and useful for hunting small pest copepods and amphipods in the substrate, but shares the same feeding challenge as its relatives — it needs a steady supply of live prey items and doesn't do well relying on flake or pellet food alone.
This is a fish for an established tank, not a new one; it needs a mature sand bed and rockwork already supporting a healthy population of pods before it arrives.
Compatibility
Red Scooter Dragonets are completely peaceful and reef safe, ignoring corals, clams, and invertebrates entirely. They can be kept with shrimp, snails, and crabs without issue.
The main compatibility concern is food competition: they should not be housed with other dragonets, mandarins, or heavy pod-eating wrasses unless the tank is large and extremely well stocked with a natural pod population.
Health & quarantine
Red Scooter Dragonets have no scales and a thin protective slime coat, so they are sensitive to copper-based medications — use tank-transfer or freshwater dip methods instead if treatment is needed. The single biggest health risk is starvation, which happens slowly and is often only noticed once the fish is visibly emaciated with a pinched belly. Quarantine is recommended but should include feeding trials to confirm the individual is actively hunting.
Frequently asked questions
Do Red Scooter Dragonets eat pest copepods?
Can I keep a Red Scooter Dragonet in a new tank?
Will a Red Scooter Dragonet eat pellets or flake?
Are Red Scooter Dragonets reef safe?
Can I keep two Red Scooter Dragonets together?
Care guidance is drawn from our own experience — every fish is an individual, so treat it as a starting point, not a guarantee. Not sure if a species suits your tank? Come ask us in store. New to the terms? Read the care-terms glossary.