I would separate them if you can. He will always harrass, and possibly kill, the younger male. Unless you have a large, densely planted tank where he has plenty of places he can escape. Make sure he gets his fair share of food too.
Breeding grass is more for egg layers. Livebearer fry will move all over the place so floating plants will be helpful too. Of course, if they are in a tank with no other fish at all they don't need anything although, if the mother is in there too she will eat as many as she can.
I've gotta ask... are those blood corpuscles sitting beside the tank?
(says she as she types this from work, where she is a medical receptionist for a GP :lol: )
So you must be within easy reach of World of Water (formerly Tropical Blues), you lucky things. Have you considered joining the Waikato Aquarium Society?
They had dinner with us just before heading up north (they just missed that terrible ferry crossing that took 8 hours plus sheltering in Cloudy Bay and were definitely pleased they were on the earlier ferry before the weather got so bad). They were lovely people and great company. Sheila will be missed.
Mollies prefer a little salt in their water. Occasionally a fish is born without a gill covering and it is possible this is what has happened with your molly. I have seen fish like this before and they manage quite normally.
Just to show what this site can do... I was rung Christmas Eve by a member of this site asking if I could help with some contacts in her area as her tank had just cracked and she was trying to save her fish. I was able to give her numbers for 3 people so hopefully she was successful. I haven't heard back and don't have her phone number so can't check. She is unable to visit in here often so sending a PM will not work. I will PM the others though and see if they were able to help.
If it is a slow leak it won't be a problem as they come with a tray they sit in. Some people aren't technically minded so just cos they couldn't fix the leak doesn't mean you can't Alan
Sue me for what Maran? A suggestion?? Sue away :lol:
I will be interested to see how many years they last. So far all ours have been trouble free and are still as quiet as the day they were installed ie you have to put your hand on it to feel the vibration as you can't hear it.
On the first day of Christmas (well, Christmas Day actually) my brother gave to me...
a birdbath for my new shrubbery (had to rhyme didn't it?)
On that same day of Christmas Grant finally did for me...
the plumbing on the waterfallery (to keep the rhyme going)
So while I was admiring the waterfall and birdbath I took a photo of some of the fry we caught from the big pond and put in the small pond. They are growing happily...
The birdbath has attracted a visitor already :lol:
Since nothing seems affected I would leave them be. I get small red worms appearing in my outside ponds. They are the larvae of something but I can't think what at the moment. The tpye of red worms that attack fish's gills etc live in the fish I believe, not elsewhere. Someone might say I am wrong though so don't quote me. :roll:
Small white ones are planaria and harmless.
We have so far bought 3 of the next model up - the 819. LOVE THEM. Have had them over 6 months and not needed to clean them out yet. Still excellent flow through the spray bar.
Using pH Up is a big mistake as there is nothing to keep the pH buffered. All it will do is make your pH swing wildly and probably kill the fish. Better to have a stable low pH than a wildly variable one.
I have huge bits of driftwood in my tank and it has never altered the pH, depends on the type of wood I guess.
If it is worrying you, put some shell or bird grit (the stuff you buy for chooks) in the filter. That should keep the pH up a bit and stable.