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Convict population control
My tank (24 gallon) started innocently enough; two electric yellow
juveniles, two blood parrots, two convicts. Flash forward four years, having bought no fish, I have a blood parrot and about 300 convicts. (not literally, but... ;) And they _keep breeding_. No fish store around here wants any more of them; I've pawned off what I could, but now when they see me coming they flip the sign to say "Closed" and lock the door. I can't (student $ situation) to expand the tank, don't have room to set up more tanks, and feel really bad about flushing them, but it's getting to where it's not fair for the other fish. Is there anything I can introduce into the tank that might enable some population control? A small shark (with or without a frickin' laser on its head) with an affinity for small convicts? A "Honey, I shrunk my husband"-sized fish hunter from Arkansas, with a speargun and a People Eating Tasty Animals t-shirt? (I kid! I kid! I'm from the Ozarks...) In years past, the fry population would dwindle more or less overnight, and coincidentally, the remaining blood parrot would... grow... (He's about the size of a Mini Cooper S). But lately he/she seems to be content to just lurk "behind" a rock with a remote control, a six-pack of fish beer (they drink mostly Kirin), and a bowl full of blood worms, watching the golf channel on our digital cable. So, unchecked, there's now... a lot of them. We also have two cats, who have noted the trend with disgust. "There they go again... Bloody convicts, filling the tank with bloody children they can't afford to bloody feed." Sadly, I can't interest the cats in aquatic feasting, either. (They're 13, and a lot more concerned with visiting, in a low-key manner, with the neighborhood cats on sunny days. Sadly, I live in Souther California, where it last rained about 6 months - and three or four sets of fry - ago... |
|| Sadly, I can't interest the cats in aquatic feasting, either.
|| (They're 13, and a lot more concerned with visiting, in a low-key || manner, with the neighborhood cats on sunny days. Sadly, I live in || Souther California, where it last rained about 6 months - and three || or four sets of fry - ago... Solution #1 - get a bigger tank, a convict tank... #2 - Get a baby Red Devil, and then you'll have 1 red devil, a very fat red devil too.. -- | RedForeman ©® fabricator and creator of the ratbike streetfighter!!! | ========================== | 2003 TRX450ES | 1992 TRX-350 XX (For Sale) | '98 Tacoma Ext Cab 4X4 Lifted.... | ========================== | ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸¸,ø¤° `°¤ø,¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø | ((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·.¸. ((((º ·´¯`·. , .·´¯`·.. ((((º | for any questions you may have.... | www.gmail.com |
Advertise them for free, tell us where you are, there might be someone that
wants some. "Wendell" wrote in message om... My tank (24 gallon) started innocently enough; two electric yellow juveniles, two blood parrots, two convicts. Flash forward four years, having bought no fish, I have a blood parrot and about 300 convicts. (not literally, but... ;) And they _keep breeding_. No fish store around here wants any more of them; I've pawned off what I could, but now when they see me coming they flip the sign to say "Closed" and lock the door. I can't (student $ situation) to expand the tank, don't have room to set up more tanks, and feel really bad about flushing them, but it's getting to where it's not fair for the other fish. Is there anything I can introduce into the tank that might enable some population control? A small shark (with or without a frickin' laser on its head) with an affinity for small convicts? A "Honey, I shrunk my husband"-sized fish hunter from Arkansas, with a speargun and a People Eating Tasty Animals t-shirt? (I kid! I kid! I'm from the Ozarks...) In years past, the fry population would dwindle more or less overnight, and coincidentally, the remaining blood parrot would... grow... (He's about the size of a Mini Cooper S). But lately he/she seems to be content to just lurk "behind" a rock with a remote control, a six-pack of fish beer (they drink mostly Kirin), and a bowl full of blood worms, watching the golf channel on our digital cable. So, unchecked, there's now... a lot of them. We also have two cats, who have noted the trend with disgust. "There they go again... Bloody convicts, filling the tank with bloody children they can't afford to bloody feed." Sadly, I can't interest the cats in aquatic feasting, either. (They're 13, and a lot more concerned with visiting, in a low-key manner, with the neighborhood cats on sunny days. Sadly, I live in Souther California, where it last rained about 6 months - and three or four sets of fry - ago... |
"Wendell" wrote in message om... My tank (24 gallon) started innocently enough; two electric yellow juveniles, two blood parrots, two convicts. Flash forward four years, having bought no fish, I have a blood parrot and about 300 convicts. (not literally, but... ;) And they _keep breeding_. No fish store around here wants any more of them; I've pawned off what I could, but now when they see me coming they flip the sign to say "Closed" and lock the door. I can't (student $ situation) to expand the tank, don't have room to set up more tanks, and feel really bad about flushing them, but it's getting to where it's not fair for the other fish. Is there anything I can introduce into the tank that might enable some population control? A small shark (with or without a frickin' laser on its head) with an affinity for small convicts? A "Honey, I shrunk my husband"-sized fish hunter from Arkansas, with a speargun and a People Eating Tasty Animals t-shirt? (I kid! I kid! I'm from the Ozarks...) In years past, the fry population would dwindle more or less overnight, and coincidentally, the remaining blood parrot would... grow... (He's about the size of a Mini Cooper S). But lately he/she seems to be content to just lurk "behind" a rock with a remote control, a six-pack of fish beer (they drink mostly Kirin), and a bowl full of blood worms, watching the golf channel on our digital cable. So, unchecked, there's now... a lot of them. We also have two cats, who have noted the trend with disgust. "There they go again... Bloody convicts, filling the tank with bloody children they can't afford to bloody feed." Sadly, I can't interest the cats in aquatic feasting, either. (They're 13, and a lot more concerned with visiting, in a low-key manner, with the neighborhood cats on sunny days. Sadly, I live in Souther California, where it last rained about 6 months - and three or four sets of fry - ago... When in a similar situation I try selective breeding. Pick out a characteristic you like in a few of the fry, and toss the rest. Try to come up with a surerior fish! It kind of relieves your conscious of willy-nilly flushing. -- JK Sinrod Sinrod Stained Glass Studios www.sinrodstudios.com Coney Island Memories www.sinrodstudios.com/coneymemories |
"Wendell" wrote in message om... My tank (24 gallon) started innocently enough; two electric yellow juveniles, two blood parrots, two convicts. Flash forward four years, having bought no fish, I have a blood parrot and about 300 convicts. (not literally, but... ;) And they _keep breeding_. No fish store around here wants any more of them; I've pawned off what I could, but now when they see me coming they flip the sign to say "Closed" and lock the door. I can't (student $ situation) to expand the tank, don't have room to set up more tanks, and feel really bad about flushing them, but it's getting to where it's not fair for the other fish. Is there anything I can introduce into the tank that might enable some population control? A small shark (with or without a frickin' laser on its head) with an affinity for small convicts? A "Honey, I shrunk my husband"-sized fish hunter from Arkansas, with a speargun and a People Eating Tasty Animals t-shirt? (I kid! I kid! I'm from the Ozarks...) In years past, the fry population would dwindle more or less overnight, and coincidentally, the remaining blood parrot would... grow... (He's about the size of a Mini Cooper S). But lately he/she seems to be content to just lurk "behind" a rock with a remote control, a six-pack of fish beer (they drink mostly Kirin), and a bowl full of blood worms, watching the golf channel on our digital cable. So, unchecked, there's now... a lot of them. We also have two cats, who have noted the trend with disgust. "There they go again... Bloody convicts, filling the tank with bloody children they can't afford to bloody feed." Sadly, I can't interest the cats in aquatic feasting, either. (They're 13, and a lot more concerned with visiting, in a low-key manner, with the neighborhood cats on sunny days. Sadly, I live in Souther California, where it last rained about 6 months - and three or four sets of fry - ago... I hope you get some good solutions. My LFS just took 38 from my convict tank. My original pair now live in a 500l tank with green terrors, male texas, fast growing oscar, 3 firemouths and a blue acara. The convicts rule the tank, and 4 of the latest batch of fry have survived to 10mm, so putting them into this tank may not have worked either!! Leong |
Years ago, I tried feeding excess convict fry to a group of S.natteri
"red-belly piranha". Don't bother. The convicts are so good at hiding / retreating that they survive long enough to grow, and eventually harass the piranha to death. YMMV, but I doubt it. Limnophile |
|| Sadly, I can't interest the cats in aquatic feasting, either.
|| (They're 13, and a lot more concerned with visiting, in a low-key || manner, with the neighborhood cats on sunny days. Sadly, I live in || Souther California, where it last rained about 6 months - and three || or four sets of fry - ago... I'll take some if you really wanna ship 'em.... -- | RedForeman ©® fabricator and creator of the ratbike streetfighter!!! | ========================== | 2003 TRX450ES | 1992 TRX-350 XX (For Sale) | '98 Tacoma Ext Cab 4X4 Lifted.... | ========================== | ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸¸¸,ø¤° `°¤ø,¸¸,ø¤°`°¤ø | ((((º`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·.¸. ((((º ·´¯`·. , .·´¯`·.. ((((º | for any questions you may have.... | www.gmail.com |
probably a bad idea but you never know, why not put a couple pimelodus
pictus in the tank, they are fast so they might be able to dodge the adults and they will eat any fry they come across, they also get 6-8 inches so they can handle slightly larger fry. i have a couple in my molly tank and they are doing wonderfully at keeping the fry population down, i call them vaccum cleaners on speed. "Wendell" wrote in message om... My tank (24 gallon) started innocently enough; two electric yellow juveniles, two blood parrots, two convicts. Flash forward four years, having bought no fish, I have a blood parrot and about 300 convicts. (not literally, but... ;) And they _keep breeding_. No fish store around here wants any more of them; I've pawned off what I could, but now when they see me coming they flip the sign to say "Closed" and lock the door. I can't (student $ situation) to expand the tank, don't have room to set up more tanks, and feel really bad about flushing them, but it's getting to where it's not fair for the other fish. Is there anything I can introduce into the tank that might enable some population control? A small shark (with or without a frickin' laser on its head) with an affinity for small convicts? A "Honey, I shrunk my husband"-sized fish hunter from Arkansas, with a speargun and a People Eating Tasty Animals t-shirt? (I kid! I kid! I'm from the Ozarks...) In years past, the fry population would dwindle more or less overnight, and coincidentally, the remaining blood parrot would... grow... (He's about the size of a Mini Cooper S). But lately he/she seems to be content to just lurk "behind" a rock with a remote control, a six-pack of fish beer (they drink mostly Kirin), and a bowl full of blood worms, watching the golf channel on our digital cable. So, unchecked, there's now... a lot of them. We also have two cats, who have noted the trend with disgust. "There they go again... Bloody convicts, filling the tank with bloody children they can't afford to bloody feed." Sadly, I can't interest the cats in aquatic feasting, either. (They're 13, and a lot more concerned with visiting, in a low-key manner, with the neighborhood cats on sunny days. Sadly, I live in Souther California, where it last rained about 6 months - and three or four sets of fry - ago... |
just offer em up as feeders when they are still small, should get good
takers |
Look around for a local aquarium or cichlid society
someone will have a large predator who'll appreciate clean feeders. Mangrove jack keepers seem to like em... do they have them over there? |
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