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#11
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Interesting points Jim, as I expect to be faced with the same issues.
I am wondering then, how do you keep the mosquito fish population under control? Or are they self-limiting -- in the same way? Thanks, David On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 06:51:44 -0600, "Phyllis and Jim Hurley" wrote: I think your point is well taken...fish eat fish. Hungry fish eat more of the babies than full fish. As to thinning. I do believe that more well-fed adults means more spawning...but that may not result in a greater survival rate. I think fish like their little swimming protein bundles...fed or not. I am sure cover for the babies is another an important part of their survival rate. It can shield them from their parents and other species. We have had NO babies grow up over the last five years. The fish are well fed and do spawn. We have a bunch of mosquito fish in the pond. They reproduce well and are, I suspect, responsible for the loss of many of the little fish and the eggs. We have a good bit of cover for them as well (WH, egg crates koi can't get under, etc. We think the mosquito fish are probably why none of the baby goldies or koi have made it. We did get babies in the first year, when we had feeder goldfish and baby koi only in the pond. Since they grew up and the mosquito fish went in, nothing. It would be nice to have babies, but it would also mean having to cull to keep the pond population steady. Our koi now run in the 24" category and the goldies in the 7-10" category. Stable population is probably good for us. Jim "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 26 Mar "Phyllis and Jim Hurley" wrote: Population: Kathy is right about pet shops and about the value of cutting back the numbers of goldies. Unfortunately, that will also fuel their successful spawn. I respectfully disagree, I think it is the "feeding" that fuels it, if they aren't fed, live off the pond than the statement below controls the problem: However, the big guys will eat up the babies if they are hungry. Reason: I worried about over population in the Demon pond when someone (and we do know who) put in 6 comet goldfish (not even pretty ones). Since they aren't fed and must compete with a dozen butterfly koi and lots of rosy reds, we haven't had the population explosion I worried about. To the original poster, even without a filter you can help the water quality by doing frequent small water changes, 20% once a week. You'll will need something to treat the new water to detox chlorine or chloramines, whichever your water company uses. BTW, can you run an extension cord out there? Not prudent, but many of us did it (and still do it) for years before we got the post right out to the pond(s)/filter(s). ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#12
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I feed Hikari & Sho Koi. Never had problems with my Koi eating the lilies,
just rooting them out of the pot. I can't keep WH at all, they devour the roots right up to the plant base. I do feed frozen peas as a supplement and they like those. -- "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... Will you fess up? How many of you feed a lesser quality fish food and find you can't keep lilies in your koi pond? I wonder if there is a correlation? ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#13
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On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 18:23:50 GMT, "JB" wrote:
I feed Hikari & Sho Koi. Never had problems with my Koi eating the lilies, just rooting them out of the pot. I can't keep WH at all, they devour the roots right up to the plant base. I do feed frozen peas as a supplement and they like those. Sho Koi & peas here, no problems, but if I put WH in, I get a massive spawn so they have a little egg with their veggies. New food I'm trying that the goldfish inside are really enjoying right now is this Mandu fu (I think I spelled that right). ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#14
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~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
Will you fess up? How many of you feed a lesser quality fish food and find you can't keep lilies in your koi pond? I wonder if there is a correlation? ~ jan Nope (at least in my case). When I had koi, I fed them cheap food (and not much of it) and never had a problem with the plants. -- derek |
#15
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~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
On Sat, 26 Mar "Phyllis and Jim Hurley" wrote: Population: Kathy is right about pet shops and about the value of cutting back the numbers of goldies. Unfortunately, that will also fuel their successful spawn. I respectfully disagree, I think it is the "feeding" that fuels it, if they aren't fed, live off the pond than the statement below controls the problem: I'd agree. I've never had a problem keeping lots of fish in a pond, but not the numbers you see in well-fed ponds. Mine are always fed for one reason only - to get them to come to the surface. -- derek |
#16
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Interesting points Jim, as I expect to be faced with the same issues.
I am wondering then, how do you keep the mosquito fish population under control? Or are they self-limiting -- in the same way? Thanks, David Mosquito fish get eaten by the koi, usually not intentionally. Mosquito fish will attack a koi pellet far bigger than their mouth, along comes a koi, who inhales many pellets at a time. Down go pellets and fresh protein. ![]() I had mosquito fish from the get go, and never had any babies. The year I decided to continue surface circulation did them all in. I guess it was too cold, being that they are surface cruisers. The next year, koi babies survived in the filter. The year after culling my big fish down due to critical mass emergency, I had koi babies in the filter and in the pond. And foolish me. I'd also put eggs in plant containers and the lily pond. Koi babies everywhere. So far I've been lucky enough to give them away. One ponder in particular took quite a few because they had made a special fry grow out pond and then didn't have a spawn. Isn't that how it goes? ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
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