Ken Posted December 3, 2020 Posted December 3, 2020 Twice now I’ve had the Panda Cory’s in my 40 breeder heavily planted community tank hatch out fry. I see them for about a day and then they disappear. I don’t know if the Golden WCMMs eat them or if they starve. Either way I’d like to get them into the breeder box to save them. I have everything in place for next time except one part… I have no idea how to catch them. They are tiny, move fast and have lots of hiding places. Would a turkey baster or small gravel vac hurt them? I don’t think I could net them.
Nat Posted December 3, 2020 Posted December 3, 2020 (edited) 1 hour ago, Ken said: Twice now I’ve had the Panda Cory’s in my 40 breeder heavily planted community tank hatch out fry. I see them for about a day and then they disappear. I don’t know if the Golden WCMMs eat them or if they starve. Either way I’d like to get them into the breeder box to save them. I have everything in place for next time except one part… I have no idea how to catch them. They are tiny, move fast and have lots of hiding places. Would a turkey baster or small gravel vac hurt them? I don’t think I could net them. I’ve used a turkey baster to move several day old fry with no issues - I wasn’t able to net them either hah. So far I’ve pulled eggs, when I can find them, hatched in a breeder box, and then transferred them from the box to my grow out tank using the turkey baster and it has seemed to work well. *edit to add - they were corydoras fry - forgot to mention that Edited December 3, 2020 by Nat 1
gardenman Posted December 4, 2020 Posted December 4, 2020 Removing the eggs is easier than catching the fry. When I see Cory eggs they're typically on my glass, so I use a razor blade to gently scrape them off and transfer them to a breeding box or net. If they've bred on a plant leaf I'll just snip off that leaf and move it to the box/net. 2
gardenman Posted December 4, 2020 Posted December 4, 2020 One more note, they'd be very unlikely to starve in an established tank. There are a ton of microorganism in most established tanks and a baby Cory doesn't need much to survive. Most likely something else ate them or they got sucked into a filter. 1
ChefConfit Posted December 5, 2020 Posted December 5, 2020 I agree with @gardenman moving the eggs before they hatch is much easier. I remove them from the glasses by rolling them off with my finger as suggested by @Dean’s Fishroom in a video awhile back. If they're on plants I cut off the leaves and move the whole leaf. I've got about 40 fry/juveniles in grow out tanks now 1
Ken Posted January 27, 2021 Author Posted January 27, 2021 I still haven't seen an egg, my tank is just too overgrown but... so far I've seen 3 a one time. One finally stayed out long enough for a picture. 1
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