Fry Die - Seeking advice...
Posted: 22 Dec 2014, 03:45
Hello All,
My first post here.
Briefly, I have a dedicated fry tank for my albino cory catfish eggs & fry. I presently have 6 live fry about a month old. They are doing well.
But, I have had one serious die-off, and since then, every egg that has hatched only lives a few hours (less than a day, for sure) before dying.
Let me give you some background. I am NOT an animal specialist. I am a guitar builder and repairman, top level at my trade. Although I am from an academic family and have a decent capacity for understanding, I am super super super out of my element when trying to raise these wonderful little fishies. For example, my 8 year old son knows more species of animal than I do, but he is not a fish specialist, and he is only 8, so he can't really help me out much with my cory fry troubles.
My 2 cory catfish (albino) were luckily a male and female, and one day I thought I had a ring fungus or ring worm on my aquarium glass, but you know what it was - eggs. Since then, I have been successfully transferring the eggs to first a poorly suited tiny tank, then to a 5.5 gallon tank that is (was??) working well.
In my first poorly suited fry tank, after exactly one week, all the eggs hatched. What a joy!! About 48 little critters! They lived well for 2 days, then mass death!! I attribute it to the ill suited filter (a tiny power filter to which I attached a sponge to both the intake and outflow to avoid sucking the critters in). There was poor circulation in the tank, and I could see a fine white buildup at the bottom of the tank, so I expect water quality killed the critters.
(BTW, I CANNOT buy a standard air-driven sponge filter in my area, so hence the jury-rigged filter setup.)
Okay, so in the meantime, my two cory lovers - Cory and Corina - kept laying eggs, and I REALLY love living creatures, and REALLY want to be able to rear these baby fishies, so I bought a 5.5 gallon tank to use as a dedicated fry tank. I bought a "whisper" silent air filter to which I affixed a sponge and had fry hatch and grow. But, when it came time to feed, the filter was poor quality and didn't have enough circulation so I noticed the tank getting dirty and I changed the filter to an external "waterfall" style power filter to which again I attached a sponge to the intake. This filter did me well and I had lots hatch and had about 3 dozen growing happily and beginning to feed.
Now, here again, I get to the point where I am really just shooting in the dark. I cannot get "infusoria" or fry feed here where I am, so I used some algae/fish disks that I would wet in a separate container, then drop little bits into the tank with a turkey baster used as an eye dropper. This worked well, and the critters were doing okay for a couple weeks.
Then, worried about what I am going to do during New Years when I am away for 5 days, I tried dropping the whole disk into the tank to see if it would work as an "auto feeder" but of course, that was idiotic and the disk grew fungus or algae (got fuzzy), and then the tank got dirty (cottony fuzz on the tank walls and some of the rocks on bottom). So, I ditched that idea and got the tank clean again. BUT, due to my tank dirtiness, I lost 30 or more little fry that had been doing a-ok up until this time. Only 6 fry (the biggest) survived, and these are still doing seemingly well after a week or more since the tank got cleaned up.
I now feed the critters VERY sparingly, but more often, so I don't see build up of food particles. I feed them a crushed (powdered) blend of TetraMin's "The Rich Mix" which is what the mommy and daddy eat, mixed with some powdered freeze dried blood worms and algae pellets (I think I'll stop adding the algae pellets, since even the adult cories don't seem to like it as much as the "rich mix"). The tetra min rich mix is good enough to keep all my other tropicals (a few species of tetra) healthy, and it keeps mommy and daddy cories healthy enough to successfully breed, and it is doing fine for my living fry, so I figure it must be okay.
So, all this background to ask a couple questions:
1) What on earth could be going wrong that my fry are just dying now shortly after birth? I really do understand why they died before: specifically, I killed them by not ensuring water quality (filtration troubles first time / overfeeding and damaging water with fungus/mould/algae the second time). Could it be that the fry were damaged during their egg stage in the poor water, and that when they hatched they would die no matter even if the water was perfect???
2) The present substrate I use is a mix of medium size pebbles (enough for the mini-fry to hide in, but little enough that the bigger ones can forage amongst them on the bottom for food) and these medium pebbles are on a black sand (National Geographic brand fine sand. Remember, ALL my fry in my 5.5 g tank were living successfully in this substrate for about a week and a half before the massive die-off, and the 6 that survived are still alive and doing well. One worry I have about this substrate, however, is that it may be too sharp, since the big 6 don't seem to have long barbels, especially the biggest one whose barbels seem to be nearly like stumps. (I did have a problem with a sharp gravel substrate that damaged the barbels of my mommy and daddy long before they started laying, and hence I fully removed the sharp gravel and changed to the medium sized round smooth rocks that is successful now.)
3) The filter I use now has been successful for fry for about a week before I fouled the water with over feeding, but now they just keep dying after hatching. I can't 100% remember if fry successfully were born and survived to the eating stage with this new filter. Maybe the fry were a few days old before I changed to it from the air-driven jury-rigged sponge filter. Perhaps the current is too strong for the new-borns...???
I am REALLY at a loss as to what to do. I REALLY like these critters, and want to be able to return to my successful stage in rearing the fry.
Any advice at all would be GREATLY appreciated. Thanks a million in advance. And sorry for the very long first post.
I can post a photo if this would help.
My first post here.
Briefly, I have a dedicated fry tank for my albino cory catfish eggs & fry. I presently have 6 live fry about a month old. They are doing well.
But, I have had one serious die-off, and since then, every egg that has hatched only lives a few hours (less than a day, for sure) before dying.
Let me give you some background. I am NOT an animal specialist. I am a guitar builder and repairman, top level at my trade. Although I am from an academic family and have a decent capacity for understanding, I am super super super out of my element when trying to raise these wonderful little fishies. For example, my 8 year old son knows more species of animal than I do, but he is not a fish specialist, and he is only 8, so he can't really help me out much with my cory fry troubles.
My 2 cory catfish (albino) were luckily a male and female, and one day I thought I had a ring fungus or ring worm on my aquarium glass, but you know what it was - eggs. Since then, I have been successfully transferring the eggs to first a poorly suited tiny tank, then to a 5.5 gallon tank that is (was??) working well.
In my first poorly suited fry tank, after exactly one week, all the eggs hatched. What a joy!! About 48 little critters! They lived well for 2 days, then mass death!! I attribute it to the ill suited filter (a tiny power filter to which I attached a sponge to both the intake and outflow to avoid sucking the critters in). There was poor circulation in the tank, and I could see a fine white buildup at the bottom of the tank, so I expect water quality killed the critters.
(BTW, I CANNOT buy a standard air-driven sponge filter in my area, so hence the jury-rigged filter setup.)
Okay, so in the meantime, my two cory lovers - Cory and Corina - kept laying eggs, and I REALLY love living creatures, and REALLY want to be able to rear these baby fishies, so I bought a 5.5 gallon tank to use as a dedicated fry tank. I bought a "whisper" silent air filter to which I affixed a sponge and had fry hatch and grow. But, when it came time to feed, the filter was poor quality and didn't have enough circulation so I noticed the tank getting dirty and I changed the filter to an external "waterfall" style power filter to which again I attached a sponge to the intake. This filter did me well and I had lots hatch and had about 3 dozen growing happily and beginning to feed.
Now, here again, I get to the point where I am really just shooting in the dark. I cannot get "infusoria" or fry feed here where I am, so I used some algae/fish disks that I would wet in a separate container, then drop little bits into the tank with a turkey baster used as an eye dropper. This worked well, and the critters were doing okay for a couple weeks.
Then, worried about what I am going to do during New Years when I am away for 5 days, I tried dropping the whole disk into the tank to see if it would work as an "auto feeder" but of course, that was idiotic and the disk grew fungus or algae (got fuzzy), and then the tank got dirty (cottony fuzz on the tank walls and some of the rocks on bottom). So, I ditched that idea and got the tank clean again. BUT, due to my tank dirtiness, I lost 30 or more little fry that had been doing a-ok up until this time. Only 6 fry (the biggest) survived, and these are still doing seemingly well after a week or more since the tank got cleaned up.
I now feed the critters VERY sparingly, but more often, so I don't see build up of food particles. I feed them a crushed (powdered) blend of TetraMin's "The Rich Mix" which is what the mommy and daddy eat, mixed with some powdered freeze dried blood worms and algae pellets (I think I'll stop adding the algae pellets, since even the adult cories don't seem to like it as much as the "rich mix"). The tetra min rich mix is good enough to keep all my other tropicals (a few species of tetra) healthy, and it keeps mommy and daddy cories healthy enough to successfully breed, and it is doing fine for my living fry, so I figure it must be okay.
So, all this background to ask a couple questions:
1) What on earth could be going wrong that my fry are just dying now shortly after birth? I really do understand why they died before: specifically, I killed them by not ensuring water quality (filtration troubles first time / overfeeding and damaging water with fungus/mould/algae the second time). Could it be that the fry were damaged during their egg stage in the poor water, and that when they hatched they would die no matter even if the water was perfect???
2) The present substrate I use is a mix of medium size pebbles (enough for the mini-fry to hide in, but little enough that the bigger ones can forage amongst them on the bottom for food) and these medium pebbles are on a black sand (National Geographic brand fine sand. Remember, ALL my fry in my 5.5 g tank were living successfully in this substrate for about a week and a half before the massive die-off, and the 6 that survived are still alive and doing well. One worry I have about this substrate, however, is that it may be too sharp, since the big 6 don't seem to have long barbels, especially the biggest one whose barbels seem to be nearly like stumps. (I did have a problem with a sharp gravel substrate that damaged the barbels of my mommy and daddy long before they started laying, and hence I fully removed the sharp gravel and changed to the medium sized round smooth rocks that is successful now.)
3) The filter I use now has been successful for fry for about a week before I fouled the water with over feeding, but now they just keep dying after hatching. I can't 100% remember if fry successfully were born and survived to the eating stage with this new filter. Maybe the fry were a few days old before I changed to it from the air-driven jury-rigged sponge filter. Perhaps the current is too strong for the new-borns...???
I am REALLY at a loss as to what to do. I REALLY like these critters, and want to be able to return to my successful stage in rearing the fry.
Any advice at all would be GREATLY appreciated. Thanks a million in advance. And sorry for the very long first post.
I can post a photo if this would help.