For what it’s worth I think a captive bred mandarin is worth it. I bought one (captive bred) about 10months ago... when he came, he was an itty bitty baby (tbh I was kind of ****** — I thought they should have indicated it was a baby). Based on how particular mandarins are in general, plus his ultra small size, I was very concerned he wouldn’t make it.
10 months later I’m happy to say “Baby Buzz” is doing super well and grown a ton. He’ll retain the name “baby buzz” regardless of his age though.
I feed him “Dragon Roe” from algae barn (and also frozen cyclops). I will tell you I tried the route of keeping an active pod population in my refugium (I have a Red Sea reefer 350). For the first 8 months I will admit I purchased (monthly) live pods + live phytoplankton to feed the pods. I also grew Chaeto & bought one of those “Pod Hotels” to try and keep an active population of pods...
I don’t think it really worked. Between getting past the skimmer, bubble trap and return pump I can’t say I ever felt comfortable that any pods were getting to the main tank. Maybe they were, but since I couldn’t see any (and I was paranoid about the little guy starving to death despite being captive bred), I spent probably $120-$150/month on live pods and phytoplankton.
I should mention that before baby buzz, I had a wild mandarin (who very sadly did die.. it was impossible to buy enough live pods to feed him with everyone else gobbling them up too).
All that said I’d recap my experiences as follows:
- wild mandarin starved to death despite a fortune in live pods
- captive bred was terrifyingly small (deck stacked against him, or so I thought)
- to be cautious I started him with live pods also. But he’s been super content/happy/cute eating the frozen cyclops & “dragon roe”
...I would never risk getting a wild one after my experience. Especially since Baby Buzz has been an A+ addition to the tank.
best of luck!!