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I asked this question in the cichlids group, but got no responses, so
I'm asking here. I have a 120-gallon community tank that includes 3 red-hump eartheaters (2F, 1M). At least one of the females has had babies, but they all disappeared (no surprise) within a day of when I first saw them swimming around her mouth. I now have a 20-gallon breeding tank set up so I can isolate the females next time they start brooding. I want to keep the tank up and running with fish that won't eat the eartheater fry that someday should be there. Is there any such fish? My LFS suggested cory cats. Right now, I have a one-inch albino bristlenose ancistrus, 7 cardinal tetras, and 4 juvenile platies that I removed from a 7-gallon tank that I'm turning into a hospital tank. Can they safely be left in when the female eartheater moves in, or do I need to move them somewhere else? -- Real (non-spammer type) people should use jkubic-at-mac-dot-com instead of the email address above. |
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"J & E" wrote in message
... I asked this question in the cichlids group, but got no responses, so I'm asking here. I have a 120-gallon community tank that includes 3 red-hump eartheaters (2F, 1M). At least one of the females has had babies, but they all disappeared (no surprise) within a day of when I first saw them swimming around her mouth. I now have a 20-gallon breeding tank set up so I can isolate the females next time they start brooding. I want to keep the tank up and running with fish that won't eat the eartheater fry that someday should be there. Is there any such fish? My LFS suggested cory cats. Right now, I have a one-inch albino bristlenose ancistrus, 7 cardinal tetras, and 4 juvenile platies that I removed from a 7-gallon tank that I'm turning into a hospital tank. Can they safely be left in when the female eartheater moves in, or do I need to move them somewhere else? I like to give parents (mouthbrooders and especially any substrate spawners) their own tank. This eliminates any chance of the fry being attacked (or possibly damaged) or from any middle of the night strays (or snacks) which the parents cannot defend against. Mouthbrooding parents might also find the dither to be distracting, upsetting the way things should go. Sometimes the parent's perception of the potential danger of dither fish is highly magnified in their little fish brains ;~) Corys might work, but they would be shooed from the spawning zone, and would still blunder back in (especially at night), so ymmv. I'd try to keep the earth movers (Geophagus steindachneri ?) in the 120g. Moving to a smaller tank can upset their willingness to continue spawning. ymmv http://www.cichlidae.com/articles/a034.html also recommends keeping them in a large tank or separating the females (for other reasons). My advice is not specific to the species of your fish, and just my general opinion. hth NetMax |
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In article ,
"NetMax" wrote: "J & E" wrote in message ... I asked this question in the cichlids group, but got no responses, so I'm asking here. I have a 120-gallon community tank that includes 3 red-hump eartheaters (2F, 1M). At least one of the females has had babies, but they all disappeared (no surprise) within a day of when I first saw them swimming around her mouth. I now have a 20-gallon breeding tank set up so I can isolate the females next time they start brooding. I want to keep the tank up and running with fish that won't eat the eartheater fry that someday should be there. Is there any such fish? My LFS suggested cory cats. Right now, I have a one-inch albino bristlenose ancistrus, 7 cardinal tetras, and 4 juvenile platies that I removed from a 7-gallon tank that I'm turning into a hospital tank. Can they safely be left in when the female eartheater moves in, or do I need to move them somewhere else? I like to give parents (mouthbrooders and especially any substrate spawners) their own tank. This eliminates any chance of the fry being attacked (or possibly damaged) or from any middle of the night strays (or snacks) which the parents cannot defend against. Mouthbrooding parents might also find the dither to be distracting, upsetting the way things should go. Sometimes the parent's perception of the potential danger of dither fish is highly magnified in their little fish brains ;~) Corys might work, but they would be shooed from the spawning zone, and would still blunder back in (especially at night), so ymmv. I'd try to keep the earth movers (Geophagus steindachneri ?) in the 120g. Moving to a smaller tank can upset their willingness to continue spawning. ymmv http://www.cichlidae.com/articles/a034.html also recommends keeping them in a large tank or separating the females (for other reasons). My advice is not specific to the species of your fish, and just my general opinion. hth NetMax Hmmm. I'm going to have to think about this. Keeping the eartheaters in the 120-gallon won't work, if I want to save the fry, because of the many other occupants, including a 5-inch severum, many barbs and 6 rainbowfish. Thanks for the input. -- Real (non-spammer type) people should use jkubic-at-mac-dot-com instead of the email address above. |
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