I just received my order for 25 galaxy rasbora and 5 pairs of painted guppy. Two of the rasbora look as good as dead, but I'll wait a bit longer to see if they've got life left in them after all. One thing that's very clear about the rasbora is that they're tiny fish, though I'm hoping mine grow a tad larger. (Apparently grow to neon tetra size.) I need to obtain or grow a lot more java moss in order to plant the breeding aquariums. (The rasbora are split between two ten gallon aquariums filled with established water, with sponge filter and an acrylic decoration each.)
The male guppies have an impressive variety of color patterns and the females look solid as well, so I have plenty of options for line breeding and maintaining strains. Right now I have the males in a heated five and a half gallon aquarium and the females in a heated ten gallon with a couple female guppy I have.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Coral Red Pencilfish Nannostomus mortenthaleri
After thinking about it a bit more I'm leaning towards breeding Coral Red Pencilfish along Swamp Guppy and Galaxy Danio thanks to combined shipping. Of course all three would appreciate aquariums that have already been set up, so I'll work that into future posts.
Onto a bit about the Coral Red Pencilfish (Nannostomus mortenthaleri) itself... As I said before they come from the Rio Nanay in Peru, but I've found there are two different morphs. There is apparently one group from which the males have a more extensive red covering. They're shipped under the same name, so I don't know if one would be a subspecies or what. Practical Fish Keeping had a great article on keeping and breeding them, and I guess the males naturally tend to be very aggressive with each other in confined spaces, less so in captive bred specimens. I guess they're harder to breed than other pencilfish, but it sounds like the normal method adapted by egg scatterers, which means that separating the eggs from the parents reach as quickly as possibly is key to success. (I figure I can pull this off by using some kind of mesh boundry that the eggs can fall through for the entire bottom third of the aquarium with loose java moss covering that. I'll try something similar with the danio as well since they should be similar in that regard.)
Onto a bit about the Coral Red Pencilfish (Nannostomus mortenthaleri) itself... As I said before they come from the Rio Nanay in Peru, but I've found there are two different morphs. There is apparently one group from which the males have a more extensive red covering. They're shipped under the same name, so I don't know if one would be a subspecies or what. Practical Fish Keeping had a great article on keeping and breeding them, and I guess the males naturally tend to be very aggressive with each other in confined spaces, less so in captive bred specimens. I guess they're harder to breed than other pencilfish, but it sounds like the normal method adapted by egg scatterers, which means that separating the eggs from the parents reach as quickly as possibly is key to success. (I figure I can pull this off by using some kind of mesh boundry that the eggs can fall through for the entire bottom third of the aquarium with loose java moss covering that. I'll try something similar with the danio as well since they should be similar in that regard.)
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Apistogramma cacatuoides and Coral Red Pencilfish
Since my killifish still haven't hatched, I've been looking at my options for breeding set-ups. If I go with show guppies it will cost me at least $75. (Assuming I didn't need a second strain to maintain the first, like in the case of needing gold reds in order to maintain half black reds.) Thus I figure anything in between is fair game. For around the $75 I could pick up a small school of Coral Red Pencilfish and for even less I could pick up a pair of Apistogramma cacatuoides. I was looking at breeding my own fish for a Peruvian Amazon biotope, but the fish are from different areas. (Coral Red Pencilfish are from the Rio Nanay which is black water, but I think the Apisto's have a wider distribution in white water...) If I want to be accurate I can pick up fish from the same local as whichever of the two I end out choosing. I'll update with more on the one I end out choosing.
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Oh yes...
After months of absence I'm finally back to blogging... The only news from the last few months is that I've picked up a couple of new aquariums (30 and 75 gallons), and that my killifish still aren't ready to hatch. I also ordered some brine shrimp eggs from brine shrimp direct and need to work out what to do with them now that I don't have any fry to feed them to. I figure I'll go ahead and set up to breed show guppies...