Jump to content

herefishiefishie

Members
  • Posts

    2268
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by herefishiefishie

  1. Get your water tested for a start. More than likely a bacterial infection which is very hard to treat. Are any other fish doing the same?

    You can try treating with Oxytetracycline. If you are going to treat, use low lighting. You will have to do a few water changes, as medicine will kill of bacteria in filters, also the drug I mentioned is less effective in high ph.

    Frenchy :D

  2. Good luck with it all. In my case, once I notice the wrigglers starting to separate in the shell, is the time to move them.

    Bait the female away from the shell with food. I had one female used to just bolt when the hand went in. the other used to attack me or shoot straight in the barnacle shell.

    Get yourself some micro worm culture just in case.

    Frenchy :D

  3. :lol:

    I just looked in on the ones I am raising. The female is hovering around an entrance to a barnacle. Got the torch out, I see eggs. 8)

    Looks like next weekend, set back up fry tanks.

    I have poker final today, will take a photo later when I get the chance.

    Frenchy :D

  4. Mine eat flake food, mysis shrimp, live brine every now & then as a treat. I try not to feed them much in the way of pallets. The jaw can dislocate easy.

    I raise my altos in a pretty much bare tank, so the dom male doesn't bash the rest.... These guys are great jumpers, no gaps in lids.

    Once I can figure out best looking male, I start getting rid of the other males. I sex them on body shape.

    I use barnacle shells fro breeding. I have tried shells, but they can get stuck in them, once again dam male.

    I like the barnacle shell too as you can see eggs, fry etc. The trick here is to take the fry out before they leave the safety of the shell. Once again, dam male, food source.

    Raising fry can be very difficult. I have found the white calvus to be hard to raise, as has a couple of mates of mine.

    What worked best was bare tank, live micro worm culture. Constant small water changes. I think with this species, live food is best in the early stages. I have tried fry food with limited success.

    I do my water changes be emptying the fry tank 1/2 way down. Then topping the fry tank back up with water from the parents tank. {I had fry tanks under parents tanks}Which I had water changed earlier in the day. I use air line tubing to syphon the water in. The young are fragile to changes in water.

    The fry can be bastards to when it comes to eating each other. I have had 4 2fts with fry at different stages, just to separate them out.

    As I said earlier its 6 months to get them to 3cm.

    Frenchy :D

  5. Of course hybridisation occurs in the lake. Rare as but, species are usually separated by bodies of water etc. But with cases like in Lake Victoria with pollution. Males & females are having trouble seeing who is who properly & cross breeding. I know how they feel, numerous Saturday nights out, I have trouble telling is she a natural blonde.... :roll:

    Smidey,

    There's a big difference between selected hybrids that were created for a reason and are an 'improvement' on nature (like the dragon bloods, flowerhorns etc) and just random/unplanned hybridisation by careless or clueless fishkeepers.

    There is a difference in what you said at the start, this quote explains it well. I get where you are coming from & what you mean but.

    Tropheus, that particular fish you linked is a purpose bred hybrid. OB do occur in the wild, rare, just like albino's.

    Frenchy

    :D

  6. How easy would it be to get calvus in if you had connections. I mean at 2-3cm... I could tell the difference, but many couldn't.

    Just to tease, here is a pick of a male white calvus I have. I used to keep a breeding trio in a 4x1x1... he knocked off both girls the bastard.

    Currently raising about 10 more, should be breeding in about 6 months. These guys take about 2 years to get to maturity. :o Takes 6 months to raise fry to 3cm.

    Very cool fish.

    whitecalvustank220507030.jpg

    Frenchy :D

  7. Because they will attack the others... Even with just 3-4, if all same sex, 3 will hide a lot. If 2 pair up, the others will only be living down the far end of where the others choose to breed. The peacock may get smashed too.

    With what you are trying to do, it is trial & error. Good luck, you may be fine.

    Frenchy :D

  8. One way to tell is the eyes. Red zeba should have red eyes. If it's a cross it may still have the red, but if it doesn't, then you know for sure. I personally haven't seen a red zeb with black/brown markings like that... but who knows?

    Frenchy :D

×
×
  • Create New...