L134 leopard frog
- pointpleco
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L134 leopard frog
Hi, in a few days I will get 3 pairs is L134 ‘s. If anyone can pass on anything that would help me to breed them. These will all be 8-9cm and approx 4 yrs old. Best water conditions, tank setups etc. Will my 3ft of 130 litres be enough space for 6 adults.
Thanks macrae
Thanks macrae
- MarcW
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi Macrae,
Have a read through this, it's my experiences of buying and breeding L134: viewtopic.php?f=5&t=32242&hilit=l134
Good luck!
Have a read through this, it's my experiences of buying and breeding L134: viewtopic.php?f=5&t=32242&hilit=l134
Good luck!
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi, thanks alot for that. Sorry that you had one die early on.
I hope i don't have the same here as they cost me $250.00 per fish, not cheap in australia.
I will have a good study over that link you sent and hope at least for now they settle in and think about breeding when they are ready. They are coming from a guy that has bred them so i hope that continues.
At moment its a 3ft tank, 2x air powered sponge filters. 1x internal filter and i have a external that i can put on. About 10x caves, lots of driftwood and some plants.
Thanks for that, Macrae
I hope i don't have the same here as they cost me $250.00 per fish, not cheap in australia.
I will have a good study over that link you sent and hope at least for now they settle in and think about breeding when they are ready. They are coming from a guy that has bred them so i hope that continues.
At moment its a 3ft tank, 2x air powered sponge filters. 1x internal filter and i have a external that i can put on. About 10x caves, lots of driftwood and some plants.
Thanks for that, Macrae
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Sounds like you have a good setup for them. I think i tried to trigger them to breed too soon. You have the right idea, get them settled and feeding well for a few months and see how things go.
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Ok thats good to hear, as i am a little worried as this is a stepup for me. Only been properly into aquariums and catfish for just over 1 year. Up until now its just been Bristlenose commons, Albino longfin and peppermints. Also a few cories and glass catfish.
So i'm not so experienced, but had to stepup to another level of pleco eventually. Just hope i at least keep them alive. Which i am pretty good at doing with my other catfish so far.
Thanks for the help
So i'm not so experienced, but had to stepup to another level of pleco eventually. Just hope i at least keep them alive. Which i am pretty good at doing with my other catfish so far.
Thanks for the help
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Re: L134 leopard frog
I have not found a foolproof way to get these to spawn. They seem to be pretty random. I would offer a lot of structure and hiding places and possibilites for males to find their territories. I found to have way better results with only 1 male in a constrained tank of only 1m/160litre compared to having 2 or 3 males in there.
They will breed well in harder alcalic water. Mine are on 320ms, GH 14°, KH 13°, PH 7.5-8.0
They will spawn in temperatures ranging from 26°C to 30°C and maybe higher. I lately found that warmer works better for egg development.
These are my experiences and might not hold true for other individuals as all plecos seem to be different and many ways will lead to success.
They will breed well in harder alcalic water. Mine are on 320ms, GH 14°, KH 13°, PH 7.5-8.0
They will spawn in temperatures ranging from 26°C to 30°C and maybe higher. I lately found that warmer works better for egg development.
These are my experiences and might not hold true for other individuals as all plecos seem to be different and many ways will lead to success.
follow my Plecos on Instagram: welsgefluester
- panaque
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Re: L134 leopard frog
I posted a thread with my experiences breeding this species 'a while' back: viewtopic.php?f=5&t=34826
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi JobroJobro wrote: ↑21 Nov 2018, 11:53 I have not found a foolproof way to get these to spawn. They seem to be pretty random. I would offer a lot of structure and hiding places and possibilites for males to find their territories. I found to have way better results with only 1 male in a constrained tank of only 1m/160litre compared to having 2 or 3 males in there.
They will breed well in harder alcalic water. Mine are on 320ms, GH 14°, KH 13°, PH 7.5-8.0
They will spawn in temperatures ranging from 26°C to 30°C and maybe higher. I lately found that warmer works better for egg development.
These are my experiences and might not hold true for other individuals as all plecos seem to be different and many ways will lead to success.
Thanks for the info, yes like you said they seem to differ between breeders and their reports. I have heard higher and lower PH levels aswell. I suppose it just what will work, I will have to try a few different things once they settle into the tank.
I will have them this saturday and i will be happy then, being my first real L-number.
Thanks Macrae
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi Panaquepanaque wrote: ↑21 Nov 2018, 13:47 I posted a thread with my experiences breeding this species 'a while' back: viewtopic.php?f=5&t=34826
Thanks for the link, so much good information i'm sure to try.
I will have a good study over it and once the fish are settled in i will work on them.
Did you keep lights on much, i have read they like it darker and quieter.
Appreciate that.
Macrae
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Lights were on for about 8hrs a day and they seemed fine with that but they had a lot of wood and rocks and plants to hide under.
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Ok thanks, yeah i have alot of caves, wood and some plants that are starting to grow abit more now. So i'm sure the light shouldn't affect them to much.
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Wow post some pictures please. L134 is one of my favorite small place's, along with the L260 and I am really hoping I can keep both species soon again in the near future!
Cheers
Ruud
Cheers
Ruud
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Here is a video of L134 spawning/mating behaviour
A breeding pair Adults: On my hand Some of my youngsters:
A breeding pair Adults: On my hand Some of my youngsters:
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Thanks for sharing, they are gorgeous!
Just see your instagram name and have been following you (and liking your pics) for a while already
Ruud
Just see your instagram name and have been following you (and liking your pics) for a while already
Ruud
- MarcW
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Re: L134 leopard frog
They are really nice, makes me tempted to get some again!
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi Ruud, Yes i will post some pictures tomorrow or sunday. Tomorrow they will arrive to my local airport, so i'm also hanging to see them up close. They have been on my wishlist for a longtime. Also the 260's are very nice aswell. Good luck with finding them for yourself, i will post some pics as soon as i can.
Macrae
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Thanks alot Jobro, some great info and pics there. Appreciate it and all the help from everyone.Jobro wrote: ↑22 Nov 2018, 18:04 Here is a video of L134 spawning/mating behaviour
A breeding pair
1E7A6ABB-166C-4285-A2DF-E05F42A32E56.jpg
Adults:
F453B3FD-4B8F-45E8-98D8-D7ACEAF2CE86.jpg
B329BBEF-70FB-4E7A-8CE1-FD272FD54A1F.jpg
On my hand
0D60B730-377F-4653-8B70-3C1C9688E904.jpg
Some of my youngsters:
9F638E4E-ADB6-4D6A-A0EB-3C1887CAF878.jpg
Macrae
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Here is the only photo i have so far. Still in the bag as i acclimatized them. They still need to colour up as they are a bit stressed. The water in bag had a high ammonia level and also nitrate was abit up there. My tank had no ammonia and a lower nitrate. So i slowly added tank water over 2 hours. I wanted to put them in faster but the PH was also different so i had to get that adjusted. Was a stressful few hours, i think i even lost my colour a bit.
So now fingers crossed they got through it ok, will watch them over the next few days. And when possible get some more pictures. Apart from all that i'm very happy with them.
Macrae
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi all,
Not every-one is going to agree, I like to get the fish into the tank within a couple of minutes, the reason is that I'm infinitely more worried about the ammonia than the pH or nitrate.
It is a matter of priorities. Ammonia is a rapid killer and pro-longed exposure to non-lethal levels can cause long term gill damage. This means you can't leave the fish in water with measurable amounts of ammonia in it. There is no point in drip acclimatizing fish, if they are sitting in a soup of toxic ammonia.
It is a bit like triage at an accident, there is no point on bandaging an arm if the patient need CPR.
cheers Darrel
Hopefully they will be all right.pointpleco wrote: ↑25 Nov 2018, 15:02 he water in bag had a high ammonia level and also nitrate was abit up there. My tank had no ammonia and a lower nitrate. So i slowly added tank water over 2 hours. I wanted to put them in faster but the PH was also different so i had to get that adjusted. Was a stressful few hours, i think i even lost my colour a bit.
Not every-one is going to agree, I like to get the fish into the tank within a couple of minutes, the reason is that I'm infinitely more worried about the ammonia than the pH or nitrate.
It is a matter of priorities. Ammonia is a rapid killer and pro-longed exposure to non-lethal levels can cause long term gill damage. This means you can't leave the fish in water with measurable amounts of ammonia in it. There is no point in drip acclimatizing fish, if they are sitting in a soup of toxic ammonia.
It is a bit like triage at an accident, there is no point on bandaging an arm if the patient need CPR.
cheers Darrel
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi Darrel thanks for the message.dw1305 wrote: ↑25 Nov 2018, 15:52 Hi all,Hopefully they will be all right.pointpleco wrote: ↑25 Nov 2018, 15:02 he water in bag had a high ammonia level and also nitrate was abit up there. My tank had no ammonia and a lower nitrate. So i slowly added tank water over 2 hours. I wanted to put them in faster but the PH was also different so i had to get that adjusted. Was a stressful few hours, i think i even lost my colour a bit.
Not every-one is going to agree, I like to get the fish into the tank within a couple of minutes, the reason is that I'm infinitely more worried about the ammonia than the pH or nitrate.
It is a matter of priorities. Ammonia is a rapid killer and pro-longed exposure to non-lethal levels can cause long term gill damage. This means you can't leave the fish in water with measurable amounts of ammonia in it. There is no point in drip acclimatizing fish, if they are sitting in a soup of toxic ammonia.
It is a bit like triage at an accident, there is no point on bandaging an arm if the patient need CPR.
cheers Darrel
Hearing that does worry me, the reason i didn't put straight in was because they were in a PH of about 6.2 and my tank was 7.6. That was a big difference, but yes also the Ammonia they were in was bad. It was sort of bad either way, like you said i hope they will be ok.
Macrae
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi again, here is a better photo of one after being in the tank for just under 30hrs. I know ammonia and PH changes can affect fish a while later but does he look ok so far after going through the changes. The 3 males have all found their own caves. The females have found places under wood and being filters to sit.dw1305 wrote: ↑25 Nov 2018, 15:52 Hi all,Hopefully they will be all right.pointpleco wrote: ↑25 Nov 2018, 15:02 he water in bag had a high ammonia level and also nitrate was abit up there. My tank had no ammonia and a lower nitrate. So i slowly added tank water over 2 hours. I wanted to put them in faster but the PH was also different so i had to get that adjusted. Was a stressful few hours, i think i even lost my colour a bit.
Not every-one is going to agree, I like to get the fish into the tank within a couple of minutes, the reason is that I'm infinitely more worried about the ammonia than the pH or nitrate.
It is a matter of priorities. Ammonia is a rapid killer and pro-longed exposure to non-lethal levels can cause long term gill damage. This means you can't leave the fish in water with measurable amounts of ammonia in it. There is no point in drip acclimatizing fish, if they are sitting in a soup of toxic ammonia.
It is a bit like triage at an accident, there is no point on bandaging an arm if the patient need CPR.
cheers Darrel
I think they ate a little so far, but they are not so active at the moment. Even though they are a fish that hides alot anyway.
Thanks Macrae
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi all,
cheers Darrel
That looks absolutely fine, best of luck with them.pointpleco wrote: ↑26 Nov 2018, 15:08 Hi again, here is a better photo of one after being in the tank for just under 30hrs........Thanks Macrae
cheers Darrel
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Just for a little add on. I move my fish between tanks without ever acclimating any. I never acclimate any fish, except for bigger differences in water temperature, which I basically acclimate within 1 minute from lower temp to higher temp. Going from higher temp to lower temp might need some more time. (if it is less than 5°C I don't even care at all - neither do my fish).
I even move newly hatched fry and youngster without ever doing any acclimation. PH ranges vary a lot between my tanks from lets say PH 8.0 to PH 6.0. None of my fish ever cared. Not a single fry ever died after moving them between tanks. But these are all south american fish and it seems only very natural to me that they would not really care.
Slowly acclimating a stressed fish will only stress it more. Releasing it into a tank so it can hide will mostly be the best way to release stress from the fish, too.
I am not saying this is how things should be done. But I can tell my plecos don't care about PH. They care for oxygen, temperature and little nitrates and this is where priorities should be on.
I even move newly hatched fry and youngster without ever doing any acclimation. PH ranges vary a lot between my tanks from lets say PH 8.0 to PH 6.0. None of my fish ever cared. Not a single fry ever died after moving them between tanks. But these are all south american fish and it seems only very natural to me that they would not really care.
Slowly acclimating a stressed fish will only stress it more. Releasing it into a tank so it can hide will mostly be the best way to release stress from the fish, too.
I am not saying this is how things should be done. But I can tell my plecos don't care about PH. They care for oxygen, temperature and little nitrates and this is where priorities should be on.
follow my Plecos on Instagram: welsgefluester
- pointpleco
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Re: L134 leopard frog
Hi JobroJobro wrote: ↑27 Nov 2018, 19:44 Just for a little add on. I move my fish between tanks without ever acclimating any. I never acclimate any fish, except for bigger differences in water temperature, which I basically acclimate within 1 minute from lower temp to higher temp. Going from higher temp to lower temp might need some more time. (if it is less than 5°C I don't even care at all - neither do my fish).
I even move newly hatched fry and youngster without ever doing any acclimation. PH ranges vary a lot between my tanks from lets say PH 8.0 to PH 6.0. None of my fish ever cared. Not a single fry ever died after moving them between tanks. But these are all south american fish and it seems only very natural to me that they would not really care.
Slowly acclimating a stressed fish will only stress it more. Releasing it into a tank so it can hide will mostly be the best way to release stress from the fish, too.
I am not saying this is how things should be done. But I can tell my plecos don't care about PH. They care for oxygen, temperature and little nitrates and this is where priorities should be on.
Thanks for the info, seeing some new comments lately i now realize i should have put them in quicker. I had air stones running into the bags as the temps adjusted. So i think the worst part of it was the Ammonia levels they sat in for about 2 hours. I just hope that 2 hours was not too long. In future the fish will be going straight into the tank alot quicker.
Thanks Macrae