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Huck

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Posts posted by Huck

  1. I have some clowns that I am hoping to breed. I got them a long time ago, have been feeding them well, but am not getting fry. Is there something specific I need to do, or do they need to be really mature to not eat their fry?

  2. I keep reading that it is fine to have different Taiwan Bee shrimp breeds in the same tank, but won't they interbreed and wind up as a wild type like Neos do? 

     

    I have a colony of blue bolts and would love to add some shadow pandas in there, but I don't want to mess up my genetics. I would rather start a new tank if I needed to.

  3. On 7/18/2021 at 4:40 PM, Crabby said:

    Hey, @Huck, would you mind describing your breeding setup a little? The group size and tank setup and parameters and everything? I’m very curious and I’d like to have a shot at breeding them. 

    No problem, but I am thinking the answer might not be all that helpful!

     

    I had gone to the lfs and bought a trio of 2 females and a male and lost a female, so I moved the pair I had into a small shrimp tank I had to get them fattened up a bit and grown out some more. They seemed like they were not fully grown to me given how small they were. 

    I was sure they were too small to be spawning and I never saw them spawning. Then, one day I happened to see some tiny fry in the tank. I moved the adults into my display 20 long and started the fry on infusoria.

    The tank has just about neutral ph with pretty soft water. There isn't any nitrate to speak of because it has only a few shrimp and some ramshorn snails. The tank is planted pretty heavily with Christmas moss, anubias, a few small buce, and some water lettuce floating. No idea what the fish chose to spawn in. 

    After I removed the adults, I noticed fry kept hatching for several more days. I will probably move over all but a pair when these grow up and give the best looking pair a few weeks to spawn again and repeat the process.

    I wish I had more description to give that was helpful. I didn't really do anything aside from keep them separated for a few weeks and feed frozen daphnia.

    • Like 1
  4. Currently raising up some pseudomugil luminatus fry that were a pleasant surprise.

    I just got a starter pack of blue bolt shrimp in the mail, so I am trying to get them going. 

    My main display tank has a blue dream colony that is massive and growing despite there being lots of predators in there. 

    I have some of the biggest, fattest cardinal tetras I have ever seen right now, and I have half a mind to throw those in a spawning tank after the pseudomugil grow out. I also have some great chili rasbora that I would love to spawn just so I can have a bunch more. 

    The thing I really want is to find a good starter group of clown killifish. I used to have some in my display tank, and I would see them spawn, but never got fry. I have had lots of trouble finding more. I want to set them up to colony breed.

    Edit to add that out of nowhere I have a giant urge to set up a zebra pleco breeding tank and grow some out to breed. No idea why, but they look so awesome to me even though I have never been a pleco guy.

    • Like 3
  5. On 7/15/2021 at 6:34 PM, MBStevens said:

    Got a few new cardinal tetras to add to my school the other day; now there's at least 13 or so. They've been oddly shy all of a sudden since adding them and taking away the cherry barbs that were fighting in here before (I don't like aggression in my tanks, so as sad as I was to lose them, I took them back to the LFS to hopefully be happier in another tank). I thought getting a bigger school would make them even more comfortable but it somehow did the opposite. Now they hide all the time; I can barely even get anyone to come out and eat food. They will only approach food when I'm far away from the tank (by then of course it's basically on the substrate). I'm confused by this suddenly shy behavior. The only thing I can think of is the cherry barbs must have been serving as a dither for the cardinals.

    My hope has been to eventually get a pair of German Blue Rams in here. I wondered if getting the rams would likely help the cardinals, if they can serve as a sort of reverse-from-typical dither fish. Usually cardinals are suggested as a great dither fish for rams, but I'm wondering if it could potentially go the other way too. Thoughts?

    What I've done to try to help the cardinals so far is add some floating plants (salvinia), lower the light intensity down 5% on my fluval 3.0, and put a sponge intake on my hob to slow the flow rate. I'm thinking my next tactic is to try getting a dither fish. Have considered some pygmy corydoras. But I don't want to add too much really as the GBRs are my ultimate goal. (It's a 20 gallon so there's size limitations.) 

    I'm super disappointed by how shy these guys are; they are stunning and my tank looks gorgeous with them in it but I can't enjoy them this way! 

    I agree with the other answer about time. It takes time for fish to get comfortable. I would not change anything in the tank for a few weeks and see what happens. 

     

    Regarding the feeding, you could maybe try hatching some baby brine shrimp. The bbs are irresistable to most fish and since they are live they won't sit on the bottom rotting. They can survive for a good while in fresh water. 

     

    All in all, unless you are seeing some indication of health issues, I think time is the way to go.

    • Like 2
  6. Hello all, 

    I've got a batch of pseudomugil luminatus fry that I am currently raising up. I noticed very shortly after they hatched that some of them displayed the shining blue eyes and even a blue sheen to their bodies while others were the a normal dull brown. I have attached pics so you can see them. 

     

    It isn't the way the light is hitting them or anything. I am wondering if it is just the males being more colorful even from birth or what? Anyone have any idea?

     

    Thanks! 

    20210712_230514.jpg

    20210712_230510.jpg

    20210712_230511.jpg

    • Like 1
  7. I had a group of trigonostigma somphongsi that I was spawning fairly regularly, but sadly lost them when I lost all my fish due to an ice storm earlier this year. 

    When I first got them, I knew I wanted to spawn them, and did quite a bit of reading. I found a spawning report on seriouslyfish, and followed those steps with quite a bit of success. Later on, I tried spawning them without doing anything to the water and also had success with my near 7 ph somewhat hard water. So, I don't think you actually have to do much outside of conditioning them (which I did by feeding bbs for a few weeks) and separating a pair out so they can have some peace. 

    One thing I couldn't find, that I am providing here, is what their spawning behavior looks like. The article said they spawn by turning upside down near broad leaf plants, but again, they used leaves on everything from water wisteria to java fern and others. 

    I never did see the eggs, but that could just be my eyes and how small they are. 

    I would just condition them, pull two and put them into a small planted tank I call the love shack, and then pull them back out after three days of feeding them brine shrimp in there. Usually I would see them spawn somewhere along the way. Sometimes I wouldn't, but I would almost always find fry 5 to 7 days after I pulled the parents. No idea if that is how long the eggs took to hatch, or if that is how long it takes for the fry to be visible. I would feed them hikari first bites for the first several days and then get them on bbs after that, and I always had success. 

    20190701_231259_1.gif

    • Like 3
    • Love 1
  8. Yesterday really, but I did a larger than usual water change and really cleaned the front glass on my main display tank. Then, I took the time to really deep clean the lid which had some gunk built up on it. 

     

    Monday, I am going to come back here and declare myself duckweed free, because I have decided to completely pull all the duckweed out of my 4 tanks that have it. 

    • Like 2
  9. On 7/2/2021 at 4:09 PM, marc206 said:

    Oh ok I see what you mean. I have already figured that out. Just use aquarium coop tubing. Then stick a 2mm bendable aluminum wire.  After that I just twisted the tubing with wire in it around a  random stake I had sitting around. I use the same to fill up my passive system. See photo.

    IMG_20210702_140750.jpg

    Oh that is perfect. What are you using for the valve and tank?

  10. I am sure everyone remembers or has watched videos where Cory and the gang visit Ocean Aquarium in the Bay area. In the first video, they looked at the way the owner of the shop was using a little CO2 gun or something to fill bottles that floated and let the CO2 slowly absorb into the water. 

     

    I want to try something like that, but can't even think of where to start trying to replicate that. Any ideas are welcome, and I am almost hoping someone else is already doing something similar.

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