For reasonably equal ratios of sexes in fry, 79/80* f. A majority of the fry produced during fish room winter (72-75*f) were female, summertime spawns (78-81*f) produced fish that were near equal in sexes. Nearly all of the WC fish I’ve seen imported have been male, which would suggest mid-high 80’s durning the end of the natural breeding cycle (low water collecting season)I've been doing some searching on dicrossus fiorni temp range and can't find anything at all that seems reliable. I can't even find good pictures. Anyone know much about this species? Rather get d. filamentosus but fiorni are available.
Thank you - so they require much warmer water than filamentosus; was 'fraid of that.For reasonably equal ratios of sexes in fry, 79/80* f. A majority of the fry produced during fish room winter (72-75*f) were female, summertime spawns (78-81*f) produced fish that were near equal in sexes. Nearly all of the WC fish I’ve seen imported have been male, which would suggest mid-high 80’s durning the end of the natural breeding cycle (low water collecting season)
What temps have you been keeping filamentosis in? If memory serves, they required about the same temperature as foirni to get reasonable sex ratiosThank you - so they require much warmer water than filamentosus; was 'fraid of that.
Was debating between filamentosis and forini; @MacZ said 77 was fine for filamentosis which is 10 degree lower than what you suggested for forini.What temps have you been keeping filamentosis in? If memory serves, they required about the same temperature as foirni to get reasonable sex ratios
77*f is 2* lower than 79*fWas debating between filamentosis and forini; @MacZ said 77 was fine for filamentosis which is 10 degree lower than what you suggested for forini.
I'm sorry for the error; when i originally read your post i saw 89 not 7977*f is 2* lower than 79*f
Ok thanks - yea the tank has an ec of 28 and likely very low ph. It has been setup for a couple of years but more or less unused.This is what I wrote in June 2023:
I haven't kept D. foirni since 1983, but everything I've read says that it needs very acid (< pH 5.8) and extremely soft water (<2° dGH & KH) to successfully reproduce. They are a true blackwater species afterall. I doubt that you'll be successful without these conditions. No one has studied sex ratios in Dicrossus species, so it's hard to say why your breeder had such a skewed sex ratio. They could be like apistos, where the temperature is a dominant influence.
This is a rainforest species so 75° - 80°F/24° - 26°C, like apistos in the same habitat should be normal for them.
BTW this species was discussed under other names: D. sp. Peru (where it does not occur) and D. sp. Rotflossen/Red-fins.
Both species ranges overlap in the Rio Negro basin, so I would treat them exactly the same.Was debating between filamentosis and forini; @MacZ said 77 was fine for filamentosis which is 10 degree lower than what you suggested for forini.
Agree.No one has studied sex ratios in Dicrossus species, so it's hard to say why your breeder had such a skewed sex ratio. They could be like apistos, where the temperature is a dominant influence.
Also agree.This is a rainforest species so 75° - 80°F/24° - 26°C, like apistos in the same habitat should be normal for them.