aspen said:i believe that it is important to have mild fry predators in a tank with new parents, it helps them develop good defense instincts. (others disagree, we all learn from our own exp's) i have had a couple of cases with rams where one parent was killed by the other or jumped from agression when i removed all of the fry predators. learning to walk the line on how much fry danger is too much is part of learning about your own fish. i have used a single oto for this purpose though. fish don't seem to realise that oto's don't predate fry.
Now I think that in a role of predator for the fry is the male and the second female...
aspen said:Xiphophorus helleri = wild green swordtail, red swordtail or red tuxedo swordtail, depending on the morph.
Me too. That is the reason why Igot rid of most of the swordtails which were in the same tank before. I caught most of them and cleaned the whole tank, changed gravel and cut the plants. Today it looks like this.aspen said:even if i returned the swordtails to the store, i would be much happier having more cac babies than those fish.
But the problem was, that they dont want fish from amateur fish-keepers in the shops here. They have contracts with proffesional fish breeders and some of them dont want them even when they are free. Most of them accept the fish, but wont pay you anything, you can only choose some food from their shop (also not worth of the prize of the fish). So it was not easy for me to give my own-bred fish to people like that when I knew that and when I knew what conditions they have in some tanks.
Thanks rick. I will sleep much better this night when I know they wont die for hungeraspen said:your fry won't die before tomorrow from starvation. they are eating mircoscopic things in the tank, sifting through fish poop etc, even parents slime is food for many cichlids, not just discus. even red devils feed their fry slime.
The interesting thing is, that the fry is staying on the bottom of the tank while the female is away. When she comes to them, they start to swim free and are app. 10 cm over the bottom of the tank.