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Old February 6th 05, 04:20 PM
CanadianCray
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The water should have high PH & be very hard. Hardness is not a measure of
salinity. Its a measure of GH & KH. That being said. Yellow labs purchased
in most LFS now are acclimated to local water already & can live happily &
breed easily with no added help. You can add some salts to the water it does
help keep them healthy just don't over do it. Oh yeah & as NEtmax said they
are omnivores. They need meet & veggie.

--
Craig
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www.Bluecrayfish.com
"Conqueror" wrote in message
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wrote in message
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On Sun, 6 Feb 2005 10:17:25 -0500, "Conqueror" wrote:

I have been raising red zebra's with success for years now, recently
started
Yellow Lab 29g tank. I ordered them online so was not able pick sexes.
Ended
up with 3 males and 3 females. Very unactive fish. They all seem to sit
in
nitches under the rocky boulder-like landscape, occasionally changing
positions. Sometimes just sit next to each other. No aggression yet, is
this
normal behavior for Labs? Temp 82, PH 8.2, Salinity 1.008? I know I have
the
wrong food, have normal OSI Chichlid flakes, will be introducing
Spirulina
Flakes exclusivly this afternoon for a couple weeks. Fish were added 1
week
ago, is this inactivity their norm, or do I have a setting wrong?


Your tank is too warm. Lower the temp to 77 very slowly. Salinity
1.008? Lake Malawi is not salty (as NaCl) so why are you adding salt?

Common Labidochromis are the main exception to usual Mbuna diet.
Yellow Labs are micropredators so give them a general flake rather
than spirulina. Treat them to clean live food occasionally.


Steve Wolstenholme Neural Planner Software
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EasyNN-plus. The easy way to build neural networks.
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I was apparently given bad info far as salinity level, how hard should
water be for Labs?