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#1
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Can anyone recommend a fish that will eat fry, without hassling any other
fish in my 170 gal community tank. Ph 6.9 - 7.1 Temp 27 dH 12 Taking into account 'crap factor' I have equivalent of 98 inches of fish in the tank. My wife wanted a couple of guppies in the tank and even though my tank is at the edge of their recommended environment, they are now breeding like crazy and another few weeks of this and my tank will be over run. |
#2
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Thusly "Ali Day" Spake Unto All:
My wife wanted a couple of guppies in the tank and even though my tank is at the edge of their recommended environment, they are now breeding like crazy and another few weeks of this and my tank will be over run. You don't really need anything to eat fry, the population will reach a steady-state at the carrying capacity of the tank. That said, if you still want something... Angelfish would be my first choice. They're not effective enough to wipe out the guppies, but will decimate them. Other possibilities would be e.g. cardinal tetras or dwarf cichlids. |
#3
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![]() "Mean_Chlorine" wrote in message ... Thusly "Ali Day" Spake Unto All: My wife wanted a couple of guppies in the tank and even though my tank is at the edge of their recommended environment, they are now breeding like crazy and another few weeks of this and my tank will be over run. You don't really need anything to eat fry, the population will reach a steady-state at the carrying capacity of the tank. That said, if you still want something... Angelfish would be my first choice. They're not effective enough to wipe out the guppies, but will decimate them. I want to leave plenty of space in the tank for future additions, in the last week alone I've seen about 20 - 30 more new fry from just three females, with 10 'adolescent' guppies in there already, it's going to become mayhem if I stop them soon, Other possibilities would be e.g. cardinal tetras or dwarf cichlids. I have a pair of Rams in my tank and as curious as they are, aren't even going near the fry, but Cardinals would work well in my community, will pick some up this evening and give it a try. Thanks A |
#4
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"Ali Day" wrote in message
... "Mean_Chlorine" wrote in message ... Thusly "Ali Day" Spake Unto All: My wife wanted a couple of guppies in the tank and even though my tank is at the edge of their recommended environment, they are now breeding like crazy and another few weeks of this and my tank will be over run. You don't really need anything to eat fry, the population will reach a steady-state at the carrying capacity of the tank. That said, if you still want something... Angelfish would be my first choice. They're not effective enough to wipe out the guppies, but will decimate them. I want to leave plenty of space in the tank for future additions, in the last week alone I've seen about 20 - 30 more new fry from just three females, with 10 'adolescent' guppies in there already, it's going to become mayhem if I stop them soon, Other possibilities would be e.g. cardinal tetras or dwarf cichlids. I have a pair of Rams in my tank and as curious as they are, aren't even going near the fry, but Cardinals would work well in my community, will pick some up this evening and give it a try. Thanks A Another option is a Betta. You should also stop feeding for several days for the hunt to be worthwhile for the predators. I find that letting the tank reach population equilibrium is a little tricky. There are many constraints which act to influence their rate or reproduction as they approach over-population pressure, and an aquarium is a difficult environment to safely maintain at that point. If you are running a single filter system for example, filter maintenance is more likely to cause a mini-cycle than would happen in a normally loaded tank. For overstocked tanks, I usually keep to one species, run multiple filters, feed more and sometimes use airstones, however doing all these things allows the population to increase to a higher threshold, so you see the conundrum. They consume any increases in your operating margins ;~). It's better to throttle them back earlier, such as limiting their food supply, but not everyone is capable of doing this. -- www.NetMax.tk |
#5
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I'd let them grow.... Take a couple of the biggest out and donate them
to the LFS when you go. Maybe they will let you trade em' in on food or something you need. If you continue to remove the most mature fish, it'll seriously stunt the reproduction thing..... Just an idea. My Aquaria pics & info at: http://www.geocities.com/spiral_72/Spirals_page.html |
#6
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![]() NetMax wrote: "Ali Day" wrote in message ... "Mean_Chlorine" wrote in message ... Thusly "Ali Day" Spake Unto All: My wife wanted a couple of guppies in the tank and even though my tank is at the edge of their recommended environment, they are now breeding like crazy and another few weeks of this and my tank will be over run. You don't really need anything to eat fry, the population will reach a steady-state at the carrying capacity of the tank. That said, if you still want something... Angelfish would be my first choice. They're not effective enough to wipe out the guppies, but will decimate them. I want to leave plenty of space in the tank for future additions, in the last week alone I've seen about 20 - 30 more new fry from just three females, with 10 'adolescent' guppies in there already, it's going to become mayhem if I stop them soon, Other possibilities would be e.g. cardinal tetras or dwarf cichlids. I have a pair of Rams in my tank and as curious as they are, aren't even going near the fry, but Cardinals would work well in my community, will pick some up this evening and give it a try. Thanks A Another option is a Betta. You should also stop feeding for several days for the hunt to be worthwhile for the predators. I find that letting the tank reach population equilibrium is a little tricky. There are many constraints which act to influence their rate or reproduction as they approach over-population pressure, and an aquarium is a difficult environment to safely maintain at that point. If you are running a single filter system for example, filter maintenance is more likely to cause a mini-cycle than would happen in a normally loaded tank. For overstocked tanks, I usually keep to one species, run multiple filters, feed more and sometimes use airstones, however doing all these things allows the population to increase to a higher threshold, so you see the conundrum. They consume any increases in your operating margins ;~). It's better to throttle them back earlier, such as limiting their food supply, but not everyone is capable of doing this. -- www.NetMax.tk Of course being The Betta lady, lol...I'd go with the Betta. Either a male or female,doesn't matter as both are equally good hunters. You'll never..I mean never have a population problem with a Betta in the tank. = ) Just make sure those Neons aren't tiny enough to fit into it's mouth or they'll be snacks too. If you were thinking of Angelfish, I'd say no unless it was no larger than a quarter ($.25 not sure of you're in America or not), and that doesn't include fins...just their body size. Angels can open their mouths larger than you'd think. It's generally not recommended to house them with Neons or Cardinals as they get eaten. However, if bought young, and introduced into a tank that already has *fully grown* Neons (or Cardinals), they learn these are tank mates, not food. After that all new Neons would have to be fully grown, and any new Angels would have to be quarter body size or less as well. |
#7
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Ali Day wrote:
Can anyone recommend a fish that will eat fry, without hassling any other fish in my 170 gal community tank. Ph 6.9 - 7.1 Temp 27 dH 12 Taking into account 'crap factor' I have equivalent of 98 inches of fish in the tank. My wife wanted a couple of guppies in the tank and even though my tank is at the edge of their recommended environment, they are now breeding like crazy and another few weeks of this and my tank will be over run. I have a weather loach (dojo loach) that's scarfing down all the baby mollies in one of my tanks. I've had clown loaches that I suspected of eating fry in a community tank as well. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
#8
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"Brian" wrote in message
... In article , "Ali Day" wrote: Can anyone recommend a fish that will eat fry, without hassling any other fish in my 170 gal community tank. I've used some of the larger tetras for this. I've personally used Buenos Ares tetras, and diamonds to keep down unwanted livebearers, but any of that general type would probably do. B -- Brian Heller Buenos Aires tetras would probably be great at fry control, but they are a bit of a nuisance themselves. They might rule in a 170g. I would've thought that the Diamonds wouldn't get large enough but I've never tried that combination. -- www.NetMax.tk |
#9
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"Brian" wrote in message
... In article , "NetMax" wrote: Buenos Aires tetras would probably be great at fry control, but they are a bit of a nuisance themselves. They might rule in a 170g. I would've thought that the Diamonds wouldn't get large enough but I've never tried that combination. My diamonds are nearly as big as the Buenos Aires tetras I had. I had four of them in a 38 gallon, and they were indeed the premier fish in the tank. B -- Brian Heller Lucky. It's not unusual to find large Buenos Aires tetras around here, but big Diamond tetras (2.5") would be a treat to see. I had this 130g tank which I used to change around to showcase different fish. In my plans was to do a planted tetra tank using shoals of about 10 each, Flame, Diamond, Bleeding Heart, Black Skirts, Pristella, Lemon and Serpae. Notice that their body shapes are all very similar. I was very curious as to how they would group. I came close to a tank like this when it was a Discus tank (with Pristella, Cardinals and a few others as tank-mates). The tank was too calm, and the tetras stopped shoaling and just wandered around without a care in the world. Next time I'll add in something which could be perceived as a threat, like a half dozen Congos, Three-line or Buenos Aires tetras, or some giant danios to keep every one a bit more on their toes (fins?). -- www.NetMax.tk |
#10
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![]() "Ali Day" wrote in message ... Can anyone recommend a fish that will eat fry, without hassling any other fish in my 170 gal community tank. Ph 6.9 - 7.1 Temp 27 dH 12 Taking into account 'crap factor' I have equivalent of 98 inches of fish in the tank. My wife wanted a couple of guppies in the tank and even though my tank is at the edge of their recommended environment, they are now breeding like crazy and another few weeks of this and my tank will be over run. Thanks NetMax, Tynk and everyone else for your suggestions, I also went asked the one guy in the LFS I can trust so ended up with 5 Diamonds tetras 7 Cardinals 5 Leopard danios And maybe a betta at the end of this week Tynk ![]() They seem to be disappearing, but I've had another 10 or so born in the last few days. What is the gestation of the guppy I seem to be seeing about 10 new ones every 10 days from three females, and more growing as we speak. |
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