Spotted Mandarin (Synchiropus picturatus) Breeding Guide
Why breeding the spotted mandarin Synchiropus picturatus is a specialist task: dusk pelagic spawning ascents, minute eggs and copepod-dependent larvae reared only at scale.
Overview
Synchiropus picturatus is a small dragonet, up to about 7 cm, from the Indo-West Pacific. It is a pelagic broadcast spawner whose tiny eggs and copepod-dependent larvae make it extremely difficult to rear; breeding has been achieved only at specialist and commercial scale. According to Tropical Fish Hobbyist, the two most popular mandarin species are now produced commercially, but this is not a casual home project.
Sexing
Males of the related mandarin dragonets are larger and develop a more pointed, elongated first dorsal spine, while females are smaller and plainer; this size-and-fin difference is the usual cue for pairing dragonets. A compatible pair will not coexist peacefully unless both fish are well conditioned with adequate fat reserves.
Conditioning
Mandarins feed almost exclusively on small live crustaceans, especially copepods, so a heavily seeded refugium or steady supply of live copepods and amphipods is essential to bring a pair into spawning condition. Tropical Fish Hobbyist notes that pairs need good fat reserves before they will tolerate one another and spawn, making sustained live feeding the foundation of any breeding attempt.
Breeding Setup
A mature reef system with abundant live rock and a productive refugium supports the pod populations the adults need. Stable reef parameters around 24-27 degrees Celsius and pH 8.1-8.4 suit the fish. Because spawning is a brief dusk event in open water, a calm tank where the pair can perform their spawning ascent without disturbance encourages reliable, repeated spawning.
Spawning Behavior & Trigger
Spawning occurs at or just before sunset: the pair comes together at a spawning site and rises up off the substrate in close contact, releasing buoyant pelagic eggs and sperm at the height of the ascent for external fertilisation. Tropical Fish Hobbyist reports that well-fed pairs may perform several spawning ascents in a single night rather than just once.
Egg & Fry Care
The eggs are tiny (about 0.7-0.8 mm), colourless and pelagic; the eyes pigment roughly 36 hours after fertilisation. The larvae are very small and notoriously hard to rear, and metamorphosis in spotted mandarins takes around 12-14 days. Successful rearing has relied on copepod-rich foods such as live copepods and rotifers, in dedicated larval tanks with carefully managed circulation.
Common Challenges
The combination of minute pelagic eggs, larvae that demand live copepod-based first foods, and a roughly two-week pre-metamorphosis window puts this species beyond ordinary home breeding. The need to sustain large live-food cultures and dedicated larval systems is why captive production remains a specialist and commercial undertaking rather than a hobby-scale one.