Jump to content

Fish Folk

Members
  • Posts

    7,789
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    121
  • Feedback

    100%

Posts posted by Fish Folk

  1. On 1/25/2024 at 8:19 PM, tolstoy21 said:

    Been absent from the forum for a little bit cause, well, life can get busy.

    A half a year or so back, I acquired half a dozen sterbai and they have been breeding like mad for me since.

    This video is of my personal tank where I probably have about 30 or so Sterbs. I maybe have another 50 in my fish room.

    First time I've had a large number of corydoras. Man, love these little guys!

     

    Great looking setup! 

  2. Found a dashing species of Darter while looking things up: Bluespar Darters (Etheostoma meadiea) The blue on the face is as close to the Federally Endangered Bluemask Darters as I’ve seen so far…

    IMG_7176.jpeg.1104a1885c6446d097ec0be0d13d7c48.jpeg

    IMG_7177.jpeg.917277b360b9280696d2c281bd22344b.jpeg
    IMG_7178.jpeg.e97554fac2a22f1006852527027cb51a.jpeg

    They range between TN and VA. I’m told the coloration may be very limited to spawning seasons. TN game law is tricky. VA would be a safer bet for catching in the wild. There might be some in KY. iNat info is scarce.

    • Like 1
    • Love 2
  3. Nice!

    I’m not a Puffer keeper, but they’re really cool to see. Appears to be two different species.

    Took me a minute on the Keyhole Cichlid. That looks like an old, old male. Possibly it’s a donation from someone who couldn’t keep him anymore. Notice the eye appears to have a spot.

    Bottom photo… looks like an African Bushfish? Some kind of aggressive old world Anabantid…

    Is there a Military Base near you by chance? Looks like maybe there’s some local market for big, strong, predatory / aggressive-looking species… 

    • Haha 1
  4. Are you testing your water right out of the tap?

    If so, fill a large Tupperware container with tap water, set it aside with an air stone running in it for 48 hrs, _then_ test that water.

    That is the best way to ensure you’re getting a fair reading.

    What are you using? Test strips? Titration drops? Digital?

    • Like 1
  5. On 1/23/2024 at 12:39 PM, oS3R0o said:

    That is a very clever way to feed in a way that keeps the humidity up! I am interested in Microctenopoma ansorgii... Were they prone to jumping like wild bettas? I have an open top rimless aquarium... 😬

    My M. ansorgii never jumped out, but my B. imbellis did…

    • Sad 1
  6. Here is how I use the “pic line” to drain water from the baby betta tub…

    Here is how Daphnia are fed back through the port…

    And here is a closeup look at the babies. It’s a theory of mine that many bottom-budget box-store Bettas are the “outcasts” of breeding projects. Desired fish go to higher end buyers. However, due to mendellian genetics, fish tend to look like their grandparents. SO, breed a so-so pair from the bargain rack, and you might get some very pretty orchids. (Might…)

     

    • Like 1
    • Love 1
  7. On 1/22/2024 at 12:33 PM, Schuyler said:

    It's always crazy to me how much they look like Aphanius Mentos

    Here is a side-by-side of three fish doppelgängers. The Elassoma is from Florida. The Aphanius mentos is from Turkey. As named, the Astrolebius is from Argentina.

    ScreenShot2024-01-22at1_28_40PM.png.e2299e6542add8d4751d064958150b41.png

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  8. You definitely would enjoy becoming a member at the East Tennessee Aquatic Association (ETAA).

    I looked into regulations in TN. It’s a gray area with tank-bred Notropis chrosomus. They’re technically both part of the ornamental fish trade, and a native species. Laws strictly forbid taking from native waters to jeep in home aquaria… but may allow for non-local sources. But against this, they are also not allowed to be imported.

    Safest bet is “no.”

    • Like 1
  9. On 1/22/2024 at 4:33 AM, Mache said:

    Thank you 🙂

    Thank you. My next tank will be Saffron Shiner habitat. They are just gorgeous.

    They are beautiful… however, they very rarely color up in home aquaria. I kept some for awhile but they never colored up. 

  10. On 1/22/2024 at 1:46 AM, MrGibson said:

    Wow cool fish is right. I’m so jealous of your rainbow shiners! They’re basically at the top of my list for North American natives that I want to keep but they’re found in Tennessee waters. I swear the second I move out of Tennessee I’m setting up a tank for them.
     

    I definitely want to get some of the gulf coast pygmy sunfish too. Those males look wild and the fisherman in me likes that they’re sunfish. I used to live in Florida and over the past week it’s crossed my mind to drive down there to visit some friends and see if I can collect a few of those on the way back up from the Tampa area. That or try to find someone who’s got some healthy ones to sell. Either way I need to do some more research first. 

    I’m doing research on your regulations. I’ll get back to you…

    • Like 1
  11. On 1/21/2024 at 10:45 PM, MrGibson said:

    Wow that’s a crazy looking fish. It looks like I missed the application window by a week for the upcoming volunteer season but I’ll try to catch the summer season for sure. Seems like exactly the kind of place I want to be involved with. 

    Several of the team members are active on FB groups. Check out:  “NANFA - North American Native Fishes Association” and “North American Native Fish Keepers”

    NANFA is a hilarious blend of Field Biologists, Conservationists, Aquarists, and Fishermen.

    • Thanks 1
  12. I miss our EBAs already! We bred several hundred a few years ago. In the end … we were so overwhelmed with trying to maintain them well and move them for a reasonable price that we eventually bagged up the entire grow out tank into two large bags in two standard styros (ca. 80x fish), drove an hour and a half, and sold them for a few hundred dollars to a guy starting a new fishroom breeding / selling business.

    If you can sell them young, do it! They’re adorable at this size…

    As for your questions about the setup… Acaras are less “geophagus” (Latin: earth-eater) than other species. I found them to be less so than Rams, Apistogramma cacatuoides, Threadfin Acaras, etc. They appreciate hardscape of some sort to spawn on. Males, when engaging in pre-spawning displays, will sometimes perform “feats-of-strength” for females by tearing plants apart / pulling plants up by the roots.

    I have never before kept a dirted or Walstad tank. They seem nice. You’ll want to think through your goals very, very carefully. If you want loads of fry, but ease of cleaning, catching, feeding, treating… then you want bare-bottom tanks with sponge filters. Every other sort of setup will involve certain challenges. If you want a pretty tank, with breeding as a bonus, then go for your Walstad setup. But if they spawn… good luck 😎

    Here’s a video-loaded spawning report  prepared for our fish club on EBAs:

     

    • Thanks 1
  13. On 1/21/2024 at 7:31 AM, Mache said:

    I have kept Notropis chrosomus for a long time and succeed breeding.

    Btw I am a new member, it is my first post and hello to all 🙂

    Welcome! Awesome to have another NANF keeper onboard.

  14. On 1/20/2024 at 11:37 PM, NickD said:

    @Fish Folkso through reading and analyzing this are you saying it hasn’t been proved to further help fish? Therefore, I should not do it?

    Just speaking personally… not saying anything one way or the other to you…

    Because there are already many more tested, proven aquaculture methods to adopt into my hobby, I don’t worry about testing new ideas very often.

    But if you do… I hope that you take excellent notes, and share your complete research results! 

  15. So... I know that the conservation status of these are listed as VU (vulnerable), but I do not currently see them on the CARES List.

    We have kept a few. They are hardy. Our tank temperatures were too warm to let them thrive, spawn, etc. I think they are egg-scatterers. The male will chase females around Java Moss to get her to release. A reasonably empty tank with a big, big clump of healthy Java moss is a great start. Some old breeders used to cover the bottom of a 10-gal with marbles. Then set a huge clump of java moss on top. Eggs fall through, get down into the marbles where they cannot be eaten.

    Feed females separately from males until ready to spawn. Get them conditioned with live foods. They can release hundreds of eggs. Once they have spawned, remove the adults... and wait for it...

    Some breeders lower the water level so that fry can more easily reach the surface to fill swim bladder.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  16. On 1/20/2024 at 8:37 PM, oS3R0o said:

    Thank you for the update! I want to try daphnia this spring or summer, so I'm takin' notes. Just started watching your YouTube channel, great content, will binge watch... Subscribed!! 😎👍

    Thanks! Honestly, my son started the channel and bred a bunch of fish. Then took a break from the hobby. I post most things unlisted because I don’t want to become a YouTuber myself 😂 … plus most of my videos are rather LoFi. My little boys jump in now and then. 

    • Like 1
  17. On 1/20/2024 at 5:38 PM, Goosedub said:

    Anyone do this regularly? How do you do it. I don’t have the time to consistently feed live food right now but want to breed. Trying to spawn my Apistos, Enigmatichromis, Rosy Barbs but Not getting any spawns atm. I think they need a better more regular conditioning regimen. 

    For each species of fish, there are certain “triggers” to cue them up for spawning. As you’ve correctly inferred, live foods tend to be a very good method for conditioning — but they may also be a trigger in certain circumstances.

    If you want to condition fish to breed using dry foods, you need to select a variety of quality foods to compose a balanced diet. Then figure out multiple other triggers to get your fish to spawn. The most important foods will assist in the production of milt & roe. Enough fatty acids are key.

    If you’re Ok buying frozen foods, you can get away using that in the place of live foods. Certain fish do not do well on blood worms. Others thrive on them. Frozen Tubifex worms (hard to come by) are excellent.

    For dry foods, I like Bug Bites, made from Black Soldier Fly Larvae, for fatty acids… Xtreme Krill Flakes for carotenoids… and some vitamin-supplemented Omega One flakes. But many picky fish will refuse to eat. I suggest fasting your fish for 2x days before switching to dry foods. Just feed a little at first to ensure they’ll eat it.

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...