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35 Breeding Tanks: My fish just laid eggs. How do I keep the eggs or babies from being eaten?




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This article is from the Aquaria: Good (and Bad) First Fish; Breeding FAQ, by Dean Hougen and Elaine Thompson

35 Breeding Tanks: My fish just laid eggs. How do I keep the eggs or babies from being eaten?

The most common way to keep eggs from being eaten is to use a separate
breeding tank. There the parents can spawn or give birth to their
young, and be removed once they are done. Egg scatterers can be placed
over a piece of netting, a grate, or a bed of marbles to protect the
eggs as the fish spawn. Bubblenest breeders and mouthbrooders can be
left in the tank until they stop caring for the young. Livebearers can
be allowed to give birth in a dense thicket of plants or plastic
spawning grass, so the babies can hide until the mother is done giving
birth and is removed.

A breeding tank also is good because it can be kept clean. Eggs and
fry need very clean water to hatch and grow. There are also no adults
around to compete with the babies for food. Many breeders use a bare
tank with only a sponge filter as filtration. Debris and extra food
are easily seen and siphoned off daily. Frequent water changes can be
done on the tank, as there are no other fish around to stress.

Another solution is to allow fish to breed on yarn mops, a plant, or a
piece of slate or glass in the community tank. The eggs can then be
moved to the breeding tank to grow. This works well for angelfish,
catfish, and Australian rainbowfish. Killifish eggs can be collected
from peat or yarn mops and set in a separate container or dried to
incubate. Livebearers can be bred in a commercial breeding trap or
breeding net within a community tank. The trap separates the babies
from the mothers and then gives the babies a safe place to grow.

Some cichlids protect their babies well enough to just be left in a
community setup, although this can stress the other fish in the tank.
In fact, there are species of cichlids that will turn on each other if
there are no other fish in the breeding tank for them to threaten.

 

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previous page: 34 Breeding and Agression: "Help! Why have my angelfish (or kribs or African cichlids) started killing
  
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next page: 36 Breeding Requirements: I have fish in a breeding setup, but they just won't breed. Why do my fishes' eggs keep fungusing and the fry dying?