Pleco eggs? I hope so!

All posts regarding the care and breeding of these catfishes from South America.
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aximiliguru
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Pleco eggs? I hope so!

Post by aximiliguru »

Could someone please post some pics of common pleco eggs? I think mine have finally bred, but I'm not sure. I have a pair but I don't know if it was them or the cories.


Thanx, Aximiliguru.
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Re: pl*co eggs? I hope so!

Post by MatsP »

aximiliguru wrote:Could someone please post some pics of common pl*co eggs? I think mine have finally bred, but I'm not sure. I have a pair but I don't know if it was them or the cories.


Thanx, Aximiliguru.
That would be a world first, probably...

Where are your supposed pleco eggs? If they are attached to a plant or some such, they are almost certainly cories. If they are in a cave or hole in the mud at the bottom of the pond, you're looking more likely to be pleco eggs.

Most pleco's would have yellow/orange eggs. I think most cory eggs are clear/white.

That's my thoughts, others may have different ideas.

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Post by aximiliguru »

actually, they are attached to a big piece of driftwood, but they are a light tan color and are about a piece of rice size. They are not that big, but I can't figure out who did it. They have a lightish white fim holding them together, like a bag they're in.
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Post by aximiliguru »

oh, by the way, they're actualy about HALF a grain of rice size. Also, my plecos aren't as light colored as common ones- I think they are ancistrus just labeled wrong.
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Post by Shane »

Here you go.

Image

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Post by troi »

Shane wrote:Here you go.
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That's a big bunch o' eggs. Is that a boat we're looking at, to give some sense of scale? Do you know if the eggs were stipped from a fish or if a captive fish dumped them there? Or, How the heck did those eggs get on that hunk of wood?!

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Post by Shane »

That is a seat in a canoe. Eggs are gathered by reaching into spawning burrows and pulling them out. Quite a delicacy.
The saddest thing is the small strange pim cat on the floor of the canoe that I did not notice until I looked at the photo closely later.
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Post by kyle »

there is actually a lady in austrailia that breeds common plecs but she does it in a pond i think she was the first in the world im not sure but i know for a fact she bredds them
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Post by MatsP »

aximiliguru wrote:oh, by the way, they're actualy about HALF a grain of rice size. Also, my pl*cos aren't as light colored as common ones- I think they are ancistrus just labeled wrong.
If they are ancistrus, the male should have bristles on the front of the head. If you don't have a male ancistrus, you wouldn't get any babies.

Also, ancistrus male will guard the eggs, which would be more orange than yellow.

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