aaron.c
Member
Looking amazing Steve! Great work
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Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I guess the male loves peppered eggs ....lolNice. I've had 3 or 4 attempts at spawning, all of them failures as the eggs turned white the next day. On the last attempted, my turqoise leopard male spawned with a red melon female! Internet wisdom says blue discus should not spawn with red discus as the offspring would be extremely peppered. Strangely the male ate the eggs within minutes of fertilising them.
Internet wisdom says blue discus should not spawn with red discus as the offspring would be extremely peppered. Strangely the male ate the eggs within minutes of fertilising them.
If that smallest red male is not the same quality, I'd just remove him first ... his loss may encourage a pairing between blue girl you like & another male ...
As long as there is no stress behavior, I'd just let the fish continue playing for the next few months - also consider if you really want to raise discus fry, what will you do with the juveniles (I'm crap at selling on babies I've raised)
You can also consider moving the pair into a bare bottomed tank with a spawning cone. You'd have to remove the fry and parents sooner or later anyway, so might as well get a cheap tank, filter and put them in there.
Hi Steve,
stunning looking Discus....even through the mist 😀😛
Please read Steve's post just before you sent yours.hi steve
im really sorry about the fish. im really stock about that. do you worm your fish every month?
your blue discus is amazing. colour is really bright and colourful. how the fissiden moss by the way?
cheers
ryan
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my phone is very slow at loading steve journal. i did not see the sad new. i just saw the post about blue discus laying egg so that was my first post and then i relise so im sorry about that. I've edit the post.Please read Steve's post just before you sent yours.
That would be my suspicion. I've never used "No Planaria" (although I have used "Panacur" without any problems in the past), but a film of oil may have reduced gas exchange.was that a combination of high temperature, (30 degrees) and the addition of the 'No Planaria' product which is a Palm Nut Oil based product, had caused a huge reduction in the oxygen levels within the water. This in turn led to stress, possible darting around during the night, and hypoxia killed the fish. This is just a theory but in reality I have no idea what caused this and would be very interested to hear what anyone else thinks might have caused it.
If it was low oxygen levels it might be a size issue, larger fish are more prone to hypoxia than small ones (body volume increases more quickly then gill area). Also Otocinclus can also extract oxygen from gulped air (like a Corydoras).Yet strangely one Flying fox is fine and none of the Ottocinclus have been effected by this at all??