I moved my pair of A. cacatuoides from a 75 gallon planted community tank about 6 weeks ago, because the spawns were being consumed by the other fishes. So, right after the fry hatched, I set up a 20 gallon high planted tank and moved the female and fry in the spawning cave, then moved the male by net. I only witnessed about a dozen surviving juveniles from this spawn until the pair spawned again. Shortly after that spawn the juvies seemed to disappear. As it turns out, there are still 3 surviving from that spawn. Anyway, the female did a wonderful job of raising over 50 fry from this last spawn, and the floor of the 20 gallon tank is covered with 1/4" juveniles. When the female catches sight of the 3 older juvies, she chases them away. So, this evening I see that the parents have spawned again, and the bottom and sides of the cave are covered in eggs. I cannot see the top, but I would guess that if the sides and bottom have eggs, that the top must be covered. So, here is my dilemma. Do I set up another tank, then move the adults and the spawning cave to that tank or just leave everyone put? My concern isn't about the next 50+ fry that are about to hatch. It's the 50+ juveniles that will soon look more like foe than friend that have my concern.
Any advice? This is my first experience with spawning dwarf cichlids. My angels have always favored the old broods over the new broods by letting the older juveniles eat the newly laid eggs. This doesn't appear to be the case with the dwarf cichlids.
Thank you,
Christopher
Any advice? This is my first experience with spawning dwarf cichlids. My angels have always favored the old broods over the new broods by letting the older juveniles eat the newly laid eggs. This doesn't appear to be the case with the dwarf cichlids.
Thank you,
Christopher