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-   -   slightly stupid dwarf gourami? (http://www.fishkeepingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=21454)

sophie July 10th 05 08:46 PM

slightly stupid dwarf gourami?
 
I have three dwarf gouramis (one male, two female) in a 32 inch
community tank; the two girls are relatively recent additions to this
tank (last month or so, I think). When I first got them they were the
most neurotic, timid fish I have ever seen but an extended period in
the Q tank - due to being quarantined with a batch of tiny striatas who
*all* died of ich :-( - turned them into well-fed, much happier and
more confident fish. These two are fine, fine, fine - very happy in the
tank, pretty out and about, and pretty friendly with eacj other.

since I them the male has been building increasingly enormous and
elaborate nests, but weirdly the only interest he seems to take in the
females is to dart fiercely at them if they go too near the nest; as
soon as they scram he loses interest. Is this normal? The two females
do a lot of nose-to-tail circling with each other, too. For a while
they both looked like they had swallowed marbles, bu this has gine down
a fair bit.

any ideas??

--
sophie

NetMax July 10th 05 09:28 PM

"sophie" wrote in message
...
I have three dwarf gouramis (one male, two female) in a 32 inch
community tank; the two girls are relatively recent additions to this
tank (last month or so, I think). When I first got them they were the
most neurotic, timid fish I have ever seen but an extended period in
the Q tank - due to being quarantined with a batch of tiny striatas who
*all* died of ich :-( - turned them into well-fed, much happier and
more confident fish. These two are fine, fine, fine - very happy in the
tank, pretty out and about, and pretty friendly with eacj other.

since I them the male has been building increasingly enormous and
elaborate nests, but weirdly the only interest he seems to take in the
females is to dart fiercely at them if they go too near the nest; as
soon as they scram he loses interest. Is this normal? The two females
do a lot of nose-to-tail circling with each other, too. For a while
they both looked like they had swallowed marbles, bu this has gine down
a fair bit.

any ideas??

--
sophie


Just some ideas. Having females in the tank has told the male that there
is hope ;~), so he builds nests. Chasing them away means neither is up
to his standards. Their circling each other is to determine the pecking
order (and rights to approach the fool male, if he is ever willing ;~).
--
www.NetMax.tk



sophie wiggins July 11th 05 04:05 PM

In article , NetMax
wrote:

"sophie" wrote in message
...
I have three dwarf gouramis (one male, two female) in a 32 inch
community tank; the two girls are relatively recent additions to this
tank (last month or so, I think). When I first got them they were the
most neurotic, timid fish I have ever seen but an extended period in
the Q tank - due to being quarantined with a batch of tiny striatas who
*all* died of ich :-( - turned them into well-fed, much happier and
more confident fish. These two are fine, fine, fine - very happy in the
tank, pretty out and about, and pretty friendly with eacj other.

since I them the male has been building increasingly enormous and
elaborate nests, but weirdly the only interest he seems to take in the
females is to dart fiercely at them if they go too near the nest; as
soon as they scram he loses interest. Is this normal? The two females
do a lot of nose-to-tail circling with each other, too. For a while
they both looked like they had swallowed marbles, bu this has gine down
a fair bit.

any ideas??

--
sophie


Just some ideas. Having females in the tank has told the male that there
is hope ;~), so he builds nests. Chasing them away means neither is up
to his standards. Their circling each other is to determine the pecking
order (and rights to approach the fool male, if he is ever willing ;~).


oh no! I thought I was doing te right thing for him, and all I've done
is get his hopes up only tohave them dashed by inadequate females...
at least he has an interest, I suppose.

thanks, NetMax.

--
sophie

Dick July 12th 05 10:26 AM

On Mon, 11 Jul 2005 16:05:02 +0100, sophie wiggins
wrote:

In article , NetMax
wrote:

"sophie" wrote in message
...
I have three dwarf gouramis (one male, two female) in a 32 inch
community tank; the two girls are relatively recent additions to this
tank (last month or so, I think). When I first got them they were the
most neurotic, timid fish I have ever seen but an extended period in
the Q tank - due to being quarantined with a batch of tiny striatas who
*all* died of ich :-( - turned them into well-fed, much happier and
more confident fish. These two are fine, fine, fine - very happy in the
tank, pretty out and about, and pretty friendly with eacj other.

since I them the male has been building increasingly enormous and
elaborate nests, but weirdly the only interest he seems to take in the
females is to dart fiercely at them if they go too near the nest; as
soon as they scram he loses interest. Is this normal? The two females
do a lot of nose-to-tail circling with each other, too. For a while
they both looked like they had swallowed marbles, bu this has gine down
a fair bit.

any ideas??

--
sophie


Just some ideas. Having females in the tank has told the male that there
is hope ;~), so he builds nests. Chasing them away means neither is up
to his standards. Their circling each other is to determine the pecking
order (and rights to approach the fool male, if he is ever willing ;~).


oh no! I thought I was doing te right thing for him, and all I've done
is get his hopes up only tohave them dashed by inadequate females...
at least he has an interest, I suppose.

thanks, NetMax.


I wonder that the fish can handle the "boredom" of aquarium life. So
long as no one is being hurt, I would welcome the activity! g

dick

Dr Engelbert Buxbaum July 14th 05 10:51 AM

sophie wiggins wrote:


oh no! I thought I was doing te right thing for him, and all I've done
is get his hopes up only tohave them dashed by inadequate females...
at least he has an interest, I suppose.


The "inadequacy" may be temporal, though. I have never kept gouramis,
but if they are anything like my betas, the female will be driven of the
nest unless in heat. And then, as the saying goes, things that belong
together will grow together. And egg production in femals may start only
in the presence of an eligible male.


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