MichaelC95 wrote:I will be using a seperater to condition the males and females.
May I ask why? I'm not as experienced a cory breeder as some many of the other members here, but I find that most corys breed with very little effort, and C. aeneus is considered one of the very easiest to breed. It shouldn't require much more than a good amount of food, and perhaps a large, cool water change to get them to spawn. These fish have even been known to spawn with only females in the tank, so I'm not at all convinced keeping the females separated from the males will have any beneficial effect at all - and may indeed be detrimental in the sense that the females still lay eggs - but with no males, the eggs will be infertile.
Most people who breed these fish keep them in groups of three, five or six, with more males than females,e.g. 2m/1f, 3m/2f, 4m/2f. If the fish aren't mature in the shop, try to get a few smaller ones and a few larger ones - the larger ones are more likely to be female.
[Caveat emptor: I have not kept C. aeneus, but I have bred C. sterbai and C. metae and had spawns of either C. similis or C. weitzmanni]
--
Mats