Rineloricaria lanceolata breeding
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Rineloricaria lanceolata breeding
A few weeks ago I bought a pair of Rineloricaria lanceolata at a local fair.
They were mature and the female seemed gravid. After releasing them in their tank I lost sight of the male for a rather long period. Only saw the female, still filled with eggs. At the beginning of this week the female was very slender (again) and I could also spot the male. He's sitting at the back of a piece of wood, taking care of the eggs.
He's constantly moving up and down, sort of cleaning them I guess. He has chosen a great spot, right in the current.
When the female approaches she's gently pushed away. I wanted to make some pictures, but to do so I'd have to disturb him because I should turn the wood the other way round.
I decided not to do so, but as soon as something happens I'll let you know.
It aren't only the Devarios in that tank that breed. Now just wait for some Tatias to do their thing
They were mature and the female seemed gravid. After releasing them in their tank I lost sight of the male for a rather long period. Only saw the female, still filled with eggs. At the beginning of this week the female was very slender (again) and I could also spot the male. He's sitting at the back of a piece of wood, taking care of the eggs.
He's constantly moving up and down, sort of cleaning them I guess. He has chosen a great spot, right in the current.
When the female approaches she's gently pushed away. I wanted to make some pictures, but to do so I'd have to disturb him because I should turn the wood the other way round.
I decided not to do so, but as soon as something happens I'll let you know.
It aren't only the Devarios in that tank that breed. Now just wait for some Tatias to do their thing
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As I hadn't seen him at his spot since Thursday morning, I thought it would be safe to get the Dianema urostriatum out of that tank (see also: Wild caught high fin Corydoras in the Corys et al Forum).Marc van Arc wrote:Mr. lanceolata is still at it. I hope to be able to turn the piece of wood slowly so he won't be bothered and I can make some pictures soon.
This became quite a chase, so I decided to pull some wood out of the tank. What happened was this:
A whole bunch of eggs floating around and coming to a stop between the bits and pieces.
After redecorating I put the eggs back on their original spot and to my utter relief the male is guarding them again. I don't know for how long though...
BTW: I also found these:
And these are Tatia perugiae eggs!!
PS: can't seem to make the pictures work??
Any ideas why?
Thanks to Dave and Jools for helping me out.
Last edited by Marc van Arc on 22 Dec 2006, 19:29, edited 1 time in total.
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You're not posting an image URL. You want to be usingMarc van Arc wrote:PS: can't seem to make the pictures work?? Any ideas why?
Code: Select all
[img]http://i95.photobucket.com/albums/l151/marcvanarc/Tatiaeggs.jpg[/img]
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You guys are causing me great envy. You may remember I lost 20 beautiful T. perugiae from an introduced disease dashing those hopes. On the bright side I think I have a male L10a guarding eggs inside a section of 1/2 ich PVC pipe but as you can relate I am reluctant to bother it since I will know one way or the other soon enough. There are 6 adults in a 20 by themselves and the females are very plump and the males all bearded up so it looks good.
Anyway, I congratulate you on your successes. It is that time of year when the SA cats are more cooperative. Even my Corydoras sterbai seem to be seasonal spawners always starting in the fall and winding down by late spring despite the fact they are tank raised breeders they still retain their internal clock settings.
Anyway, I congratulate you on your successes. It is that time of year when the SA cats are more cooperative. Even my Corydoras sterbai seem to be seasonal spawners always starting in the fall and winding down by late spring despite the fact they are tank raised breeders they still retain their internal clock settings.
Avid Trout fly fisherman. ·´¯`·...¸><)))º>
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Hi Marc,
I take it ,"In nature you trusted" and the eggs were all eaten? I never trust nature after I discover/disturb a spawn and pull the eggs I ca recover for artificially hatching. But they will probably spawn again soon enough and you will be prepared. Still,it was good to see they spawned.
I take it ,"In nature you trusted" and the eggs were all eaten? I never trust nature after I discover/disturb a spawn and pull the eggs I ca recover for artificially hatching. But they will probably spawn again soon enough and you will be prepared. Still,it was good to see they spawned.
Avid Trout fly fisherman. ·´¯`·...¸><)))º>
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Well, I was disappointed by the disappearance of the Tatia eggs. Due to my own fault. In order to make it easier for me to view them, I placed the piece of wood in a corner. And of course every fish that tried to round that corner, automatically ended up in the hole with eggs. Brilliant thinking on my behalf.
But, to ease the "pain", several dots of floating-around-eggs are hatching at the moment. Though unprotected no fish seems interested in these wrigling little creatures, which I suppose to be Rineloricarias.
But, to ease the "pain", several dots of floating-around-eggs are hatching at the moment. Though unprotected no fish seems interested in these wrigling little creatures, which I suppose to be Rineloricarias.
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