Hi Jeanne,sturiosoma wrote: ↑26 Feb 2023, 16:39Hey Eric have you ever thought of with you having a greenhouse to put one of your spare breeder boxes and who doesn't have a spare in the greenhouse and allow it to fester sort of speak for those unplanned spawns
Jeanne
That's exactly what I did to grow the algae on the plastic plates. I have a breeder box with plastic plates inside in a greenhouse tank to culture algae. I put multiple plates in there so I can pull out a different plate every few days.
But I don't put the babies out there for a few reasons. First, the greenhouse is not thermally stable, and with new babies (especially with a first-time spawn for me, regarding the lanceolata), I want them to have a stable environment. Second, on the advice of other whiptail breeders and based on my experience with eigenmanni over the last couple of years, microworms are a first choice food for these fry (unlike, for example, other species that might prefer algae over an omnivorous diet), and I have a stable cultures of microworms both at home for eigenmanni and at work for lanceolata. Finally, I feed the fry at least twice a day, but I only get to go to the greenhouse once a day at most; again on advice from other breeders, a constant supply of food is critical for food survival, therefore I keep the fry close to me at work.
From your questions, I'm inferring that your experience says algae is the "go-to" food for baby whiptails; is that right?
Cheers, Eric