Spawning c121
- rhibear
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Spawning c121
I was hoping that someone here might have some tips for me.
I managed to get 7 c121s a few months ago, they turned out to be 5 females and just 2 males. I've been feeding them live black worms, frozen blood worms and daphnia plus crushed high protein pellet foods. The females look ready to pop.
They are housed in a 75g planted display tank with a couple of different plecos and my black schultzei colony that spawn quite regularly. They have been getting twice weekly water changes of about 40% which drops the temp from 76F to around 72F.
Our well water chemistry is:
6.4pH - Amm & Nitrite:0 - Nitrate:5 - Gh:< 1 - Kh:< 1
the tank water is the same, with occassionally higher nitrates up to around 20 before a change.
After a cold water change they look dejected and miserable. When the schultzei spawn the c121s sit in their corner and appear to quietly wait it out. Occasionally I see a male slowly following a female and flirting with his whiskers. They seem active, happy and healthy, but there has been 0 spawning activity. Any suggestions welcomed and appreciated.
I managed to get 7 c121s a few months ago, they turned out to be 5 females and just 2 males. I've been feeding them live black worms, frozen blood worms and daphnia plus crushed high protein pellet foods. The females look ready to pop.
They are housed in a 75g planted display tank with a couple of different plecos and my black schultzei colony that spawn quite regularly. They have been getting twice weekly water changes of about 40% which drops the temp from 76F to around 72F.
Our well water chemistry is:
6.4pH - Amm & Nitrite:0 - Nitrate:5 - Gh:< 1 - Kh:< 1
the tank water is the same, with occassionally higher nitrates up to around 20 before a change.
After a cold water change they look dejected and miserable. When the schultzei spawn the c121s sit in their corner and appear to quietly wait it out. Occasionally I see a male slowly following a female and flirting with his whiskers. They seem active, happy and healthy, but there has been 0 spawning activity. Any suggestions welcomed and appreciated.
- MatsP
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Re: Spawning c121
These fish come from the Upper Rio Negro. I would push the temperature a tad higher, perhaps 82-85'F. Then drop the temperature by about 5'F when doing the water change.
This is not a guaranteed way to do it, but I think they may look less "listless and dejected" after water change if the temperature is a bit warmer.
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Mats
This is not a guaranteed way to do it, but I think they may look less "listless and dejected" after water change if the temperature is a bit warmer.
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Mats
- Coryman
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Re: Spawning c121
I would be inclined to reduce the high protein foods, although a female I think the fish shown is somewhat over weight. This can be clearly seen with the bulging below the head. I would at giving them a more balanced diet will far less protein.
And as Mats has suggested raising the temperature to at least 80ºF would help.
Ian
And as Mats has suggested raising the temperature to at least 80ºF would help.
Ian
- rhibear
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Re: Spawning c121
Thanks for the suggestions.
I agree that they are overweight, largely because they have been hogging down the food intended for the black corys who had lost some weight. I will try to balance their diet better.
Regarding the higher temps, I am confused as to why the temp range on the Burgessi Cat-eLog page is only 73.4-78.8°F if they prefer higher.
I agree that they are overweight, largely because they have been hogging down the food intended for the black corys who had lost some weight. I will try to balance their diet better.
Regarding the higher temps, I am confused as to why the temp range on the Burgessi Cat-eLog page is only 73.4-78.8°F if they prefer higher.
- MatsP
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Re: Spawning c121
Because we're not perfect here at Planet Catfish, and other people are not perfect... 22-26'C is a generally good temperature for Corys, so it has been applied here and on other sites pretty generously...
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Mats
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Mats