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Aggressive fat fish at dinner time
Hey, All,
I have a 20 gal tank with 6 lepord danios and a bristle nose plico in it. One of the danios is bigger and is shaped a little different than the others. It almost looks like he has something of a gut. I call him Fat Albert because of this. Fat Albert has a tendancy to chase all the other fish around, but come meal time he seems to just get mean. He never nips, but if any fish gets by any food that he can see he chases them away. It seems like everyone is eating enough, but Fat Albert always seems to get too much. Is this a problem? Is there anything I can do to make sure he isn't stressing the other fish out? Thank you for the help. Travis |
robotuna wrote:
Hey, All, I have a 20 gal tank with 6 lepord danios and a bristle nose plico in it. One of the danios is bigger and is shaped a little different than the others. It almost looks like he has something of a gut. I call him Fat Albert because of this. Fat Albert has a tendancy to chase all the other fish around, but come meal time he seems to just get mean. He never nips, but if any fish gets by any food that he can see he chases them away. It seems like everyone is eating enough, but Fat Albert always seems to get too much. Is this a problem? Is there anything I can do to make sure he isn't stressing the other fish out? Thank you for the help. Travis If everyone is eating enough it's fine. Danios are quick and hungry danios are even quicker so I'm not surprised they're all getting their share of food. It's good that you have 6 danios. That way Fat Albert's aggression is spread across the other 5 and no single fish will be a target. To be sure he isn't stressing the others, just watch them. If the rest of the danios are active and interacting with each other, their fins are undamaged and not clamped (held abnormally close to the body), their color is good and not faded, and they're not getting thin or abnormally fat, they are not stressed. -- __ Elaine T __ __' http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ |
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"Jim Anderson" Hey, All, I have a 20 gal tank with 6 lepord danios and a bristle nose plico in it. One of the danios is bigger and is shaped a little different than the others. It almost looks like he has something of a gut. I call him Fat Albert because of this. Fat Albert has a tendancy to chase all the other fish Hey Jim, From my experience with Danios, both the body shape and behaviour suggest her name is actually Fat Alberta. HTH Rich |
Thanks for the help. How do you tell the sex of danios? Could her "gut"
be eggs? I don't plan on breeding them right now, but do I need to do anything to help/protect her? Also, I do have one fish that has the clamped top and bottom fins. But he has been like that since I got him. He schools and interacts with the others, and he is really active at dinner time, but most of the time he just chills in different areas of the tank. Should I do anything, or is he just a depressive fish? Thanks for the advice. Travis |
"robotuna" wrote in message oups.com... Thanks for the help. How do you tell the sex of danios? Could her "gut" be eggs? I don't plan on breeding them right now, but do I need to do anything to help/protect her? Also, I do have one fish that has the clamped top and bottom fins. But he has been like that since I got him. He schools and interacts with the others, and he is really active at dinner time, but most of the time he just chills in different areas of the tank. Should I do anything, or is he just a depressive fish? Thanks for the advice. Travis Not sure about the depressive fish. Maybe the others are long fin, and he's a short fin variety ? But sexing Danios is fairly easy. Males are slimmer, females have a fuller belly. Females will become "fat" as they get laden with eggs. Males may take on a brown or gold tinge when they are ready to breed. They are probably breeding already (Do you ever see two fish swimming fast in very tight circles ?). Danios (and any other fish in the tank) will eat the eggs, hence no babies. HTH Rich |
Thanks for the info. I did notice some activity like you mentioned,
with them swimming in circles. If they are mating that would be great, since in the future I would like to try breeding them. Please take a look at my new thread about my danio and plico possibly being sick. I decided, since the topic was different, I should start a new thread instead of changing this one. Thanks everyone for all the help. I'm still learning, so every little tip helps. Travis |
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