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#1
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I have two koi angel fish, both approx. 1 year old who grew up
together. Both are about 3" in the body, with substantially longer fins. They have always bickered a lot, chased each other around the tank, took turns being the bully. But lately their behavior has become much stranger and intense. They spend a lot of time facing each other and twitching, then locking lips and spinning around. Very weird. The guy at my LFS told me that this is mating behavior and that this means they are a pair. They are the only fish in the tank (with the exception of a vampire pleco.) They have actually done the lip lock thing for a long time at periodic intervals, but the twitching is new. They also dart around the tank at breakneck speed and nip at each other quite a bit, usually on the body (I've never noticed them nipping at each other's fins.) Sometimes they rapidly flutter their fins and tail as well. Their frenzy for food has also been lacking of late, and where normally the frozen bloodworm gumball that's usually devoured in about 1.5 minutes for dinner, is only picked at over the span of an hour or two. They have still enjoyed their frozen brine shrimp though, but I don't think this is a good diet on its own. I would like to hear from anyone who has had angels that acted similarly to this, and what it means. I hope it isn't something I should worry about; they have always been fantastically colored, healthy, active and alert and I am quite attached to them so I want to make sure I'm doing everything that I can to keep them that way. TIA, Jen |
#3
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I have found that having something for the parents to defend the eggs
against always helps cichlids be better parents. Even another fishtank placed with it's end to the one with the breeders in it can work. prob don't recognise the plec as a threat. If you do decide to try raise the eggs yourself get something to help prevent fungus acriflavine works pretty well in my experience but then so does just letting the pair try a few more times They usually get it right in the end wrote in message oups.com... Well, not more than a couple of hours after I posted my original message, I noticed a TON of eggs all over the java moss, which is growing off a large piece of driftwood. I watched the fish for a couple of hours then, and saw that actually, the female was laying her eggs vertically, on the filter pipe! Then the male would follow her over the eggs. I was really excited about this! The appearance of the behavior was just very cute and sweet to watch, especially after all the fighting. From some of the reading and research I've done, it does appear that they are male and female, judging by not only the behavior but by the difference of appendage, if you will, protruding from underside of the male fish in comparison to the female. Anyway, by morning they had eaten all the eggs I could see, but I can't imagine tha they got ALL of them, since many were nestled quite deeply in the tangled java moss. My pleco might've made quite a meal of them though, since vamps are real carnivores. I will keep hope that some of the eggs will make it on their own; I actually dreamed last night that one morning I looked in the tank and found a few babies swimming around. That would be really cool. Otherwise, maybe next time I'll be more prepared and have a nursery tank ready to pull out the eggs once they are laid and fertilized. :-) Nikki Casali wrote: wrote: I have two koi angel fish, both approx. 1 year old who grew up together. Both are about 3" in the body, with substantially longer fins. They have always bickered a lot, chased each other around the tank, took turns being the bully. But lately their behavior has become much stranger and intense. They spend a lot of time facing each other and twitching, then locking lips and spinning around. Very weird. The guy at my LFS told me that this is mating behavior and that this means they are a pair. They are the only fish in the tank (with the exception of a vampire pleco.) They have actually done the lip lock thing for a long time at periodic intervals, but the twitching is new. They also dart around the tank at breakneck speed and nip at each other quite a bit, usually on the body (I've never noticed them nipping at each other's fins.) Sometimes they rapidly flutter their fins and tail as well. Their frenzy for food has also been lacking of late, and where normally the frozen bloodworm gumball that's usually devoured in about 1.5 minutes for dinner, is only picked at over the span of an hour or two. They have still enjoyed their frozen brine shrimp though, but I don't think this is a good diet on its own. I would like to hear from anyone who has had angels that acted similarly to this, and what it means. I hope it isn't something I should worry about; they have always been fantastically colored, healthy, active and alert and I am quite attached to them so I want to make sure I'm doing everything that I can to keep them that way. From my own experience, this seems perfectly natural. There is a poossbility that they could harm themselves when they get too aggressive, but I think this is rare. When mine decide to lay eggs, they band together and turn that aggression on to the other tanks mates, while protecting their chosen egg laying leaf. Nikki |
#4
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A few eggs have survived... a couple buried safely amongst the gravel
and one in the tangle of the java moss. I'm torn between trying to rescue them and just letting them be to see what happens. I know that sounds silly, and is bound to be viewed as "first time excitement" but I would really love it if I got even a couple of babies out of this momentous occasion. Is there any chance that the few remaining eggs could survive and hatch, without any treatment from either me or the parents? I keep reading that fungus is a problem and wonder, if left untreated, would the eggs possible still be viable? I know after a few times of this the spawning might become droll and commonplace but for now I'm going to indulge in the newness of the excitement. :-) thanks again, Jen swarvegorilla wrote: I have found that having something for the parents to defend the eggs against always helps cichlids be better parents. Even another fishtank placed with it's end to the one with the breeders in it can work. prob don't recognise the plec as a threat. If you do decide to try raise the eggs yourself get something to help prevent fungus acriflavine works pretty well in my experience but then so does just letting the pair try a few more times They usually get it right in the end wrote in message oups.com... Well, not more than a couple of hours after I posted my original message, I noticed a TON of eggs all over the java moss, which is growing off a large piece of driftwood. I watched the fish for a couple of hours then, and saw that actually, the female was laying her eggs vertically, on the filter pipe! Then the male would follow her over the eggs. I was really excited about this! The appearance of the behavior was just very cute and sweet to watch, especially after all the fighting. From some of the reading and research I've done, it does appear that they are male and female, judging by not only the behavior but by the difference of appendage, if you will, protruding from underside of the male fish in comparison to the female. Anyway, by morning they had eaten all the eggs I could see, but I can't imagine tha they got ALL of them, since many were nestled quite deeply in the tangled java moss. My pleco might've made quite a meal of them though, since vamps are real carnivores. I will keep hope that some of the eggs will make it on their own; I actually dreamed last night that one morning I looked in the tank and found a few babies swimming around. That would be really cool. Otherwise, maybe next time I'll be more prepared and have a nursery tank ready to pull out the eggs once they are laid and fertilized. :-) Nikki Casali wrote: wrote: I have two koi angel fish, both approx. 1 year old who grew up together. Both are about 3" in the body, with substantially longer fins. They have always bickered a lot, chased each other around the tank, took turns being the bully. But lately their behavior has become much stranger and intense. They spend a lot of time facing each other and twitching, then locking lips and spinning around. Very weird. The guy at my LFS told me that this is mating behavior and that this means they are a pair. They are the only fish in the tank (with the exception of a vampire pleco.) They have actually done the lip lock thing for a long time at periodic intervals, but the twitching is new. They also dart around the tank at breakneck speed and nip at each other quite a bit, usually on the body (I've never noticed them nipping at each other's fins.) Sometimes they rapidly flutter their fins and tail as well. Their frenzy for food has also been lacking of late, and where normally the frozen bloodworm gumball that's usually devoured in about 1.5 minutes for dinner, is only picked at over the span of an hour or two. They have still enjoyed their frozen brine shrimp though, but I don't think this is a good diet on its own. I would like to hear from anyone who has had angels that acted similarly to this, and what it means. I hope it isn't something I should worry about; they have always been fantastically colored, healthy, active and alert and I am quite attached to them so I want to make sure I'm doing everything that I can to keep them that way. From my own experience, this seems perfectly natural. There is a poossbility that they could harm themselves when they get too aggressive, but I think this is rare. When mine decide to lay eggs, they band together and turn that aggression on to the other tanks mates, while protecting their chosen egg laying leaf. Nikki |
#5
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... A few eggs have survived... a couple buried safely amongst the gravel and one in the tangle of the java moss. I'm torn between trying to rescue them and just letting them be to see what happens. I know that sounds silly, and is bound to be viewed as "first time excitement" but I would really love it if I got even a couple of babies out of this momentous occasion. ======================= You may want to check out: http://members.aol.com/AngelBook/angel1.htm and http://websvirginia.com/angels/ -- KL.... Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* |
#6
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#7
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I did forget to mention the behavior you were seeing before they
spawned is very typical of Angels before they settle down to spawn. They are doing a mock battle. This is a way for each of them to see whether or not the other is (or still) worthy of spawning. Many pairs will do this just like if it were the first time. Some may settle on a little fin flashing, some a lip lock-tug o war (this looks so painful), some just keep intruders at bay and then just spawn. I currently have 2 males bickering over the same female. She shows interest in them both, yet neither will back down. The males do a lot of fin flashing and nipping here and there, but don't do any damage to each other. It's more for the point of showing off to each other than a true fight. I have left them to figure this out on their own, unless it gets nasty. |
#8
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If the parents ain't defending them
they will eat the wrigglers yea I know dam!!! but it's a good sign that they spawned! Next time hopefully you will get to see them raise a whole swarm. And no it doesn't get old, trust me. Same sorta fist pumping in the air and BOOOO-YAAAA call fry = w0000000000000t!!!!!! I got to see an urchin lay eggs in me marine tank the other day No chance of babies but still! yea baby!!! :-) wrote in message oups.com... A few eggs have survived... a couple buried safely amongst the gravel and one in the tangle of the java moss. I'm torn between trying to rescue them and just letting them be to see what happens. I know that sounds silly, and is bound to be viewed as "first time excitement" but I would really love it if I got even a couple of babies out of this momentous occasion. Is there any chance that the few remaining eggs could survive and hatch, without any treatment from either me or the parents? I keep reading that fungus is a problem and wonder, if left untreated, would the eggs possible still be viable? I know after a few times of this the spawning might become droll and commonplace but for now I'm going to indulge in the newness of the excitement. :-) thanks again, Jen swarvegorilla wrote: I have found that having something for the parents to defend the eggs against always helps cichlids be better parents. Even another fishtank placed with it's end to the one with the breeders in it can work. prob don't recognise the plec as a threat. If you do decide to try raise the eggs yourself get something to help prevent fungus acriflavine works pretty well in my experience but then so does just letting the pair try a few more times They usually get it right in the end wrote in message oups.com... Well, not more than a couple of hours after I posted my original message, I noticed a TON of eggs all over the java moss, which is growing off a large piece of driftwood. I watched the fish for a couple of hours then, and saw that actually, the female was laying her eggs vertically, on the filter pipe! Then the male would follow her over the eggs. I was really excited about this! The appearance of the behavior was just very cute and sweet to watch, especially after all the fighting. From some of the reading and research I've done, it does appear that they are male and female, judging by not only the behavior but by the difference of appendage, if you will, protruding from underside of the male fish in comparison to the female. Anyway, by morning they had eaten all the eggs I could see, but I can't imagine tha they got ALL of them, since many were nestled quite deeply in the tangled java moss. My pleco might've made quite a meal of them though, since vamps are real carnivores. I will keep hope that some of the eggs will make it on their own; I actually dreamed last night that one morning I looked in the tank and found a few babies swimming around. That would be really cool. Otherwise, maybe next time I'll be more prepared and have a nursery tank ready to pull out the eggs once they are laid and fertilized. :-) Nikki Casali wrote: wrote: I have two koi angel fish, both approx. 1 year old who grew up together. Both are about 3" in the body, with substantially longer fins. They have always bickered a lot, chased each other around the tank, took turns being the bully. But lately their behavior has become much stranger and intense. They spend a lot of time facing each other and twitching, then locking lips and spinning around. Very weird. The guy at my LFS told me that this is mating behavior and that this means they are a pair. They are the only fish in the tank (with the exception of a vampire pleco.) They have actually done the lip lock thing for a long time at periodic intervals, but the twitching is new. They also dart around the tank at breakneck speed and nip at each other quite a bit, usually on the body (I've never noticed them nipping at each other's fins.) Sometimes they rapidly flutter their fins and tail as well. Their frenzy for food has also been lacking of late, and where normally the frozen bloodworm gumball that's usually devoured in about 1.5 minutes for dinner, is only picked at over the span of an hour or two. They have still enjoyed their frozen brine shrimp though, but I don't think this is a good diet on its own. I would like to hear from anyone who has had angels that acted similarly to this, and what it means. I hope it isn't something I should worry about; they have always been fantastically colored, healthy, active and alert and I am quite attached to them so I want to make sure I'm doing everything that I can to keep them that way. From my own experience, this seems perfectly natural. There is a poossbility that they could harm themselves when they get too aggressive, but I think this is rare. When mine decide to lay eggs, they band together and turn that aggression on to the other tanks mates, while protecting their chosen egg laying leaf. Nikki |
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