FAQs on Platy Reproduction, Breeding 4
Related Articles:
Platies,
Poeciliids: Guppies, Platies, Swordtails, Mollies by Neale Monks,
Livebearing Fishes by Bob Fenner,
Related FAQs:
Platy Reproduction 1
Platy Reproduction 2,
Platy Reproduction 3,
Platy Reproduction 5,
Platies 1,
Platies 2,
Platy Identification,
Platy Behavior,
Platy Compatibility,
Platy Selection,
Platy Systems,
Platy Feeding,
Platy Disease,
Livebearers,
Guppies,
Swordtails,
Mollies,
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Platy problem
2/26/19
My female platy, who has given birth before, has a small, bulbous match
extruding from her anal orifice. It looks as if a fry got stuck being born.
What is happening?
<Likely a degree of prolapse... part of the combined sex and excretory
process extending outside the body... Usually due to nutrition, water
quality issues; with a modicum of genetic predisposition mixed in>
The fish is still eating and swimming well.
<Good>
I am struggling with excessive mold in this tank. Thanks for helping.
<Do your best to keep up the environment, provide sufficient
roughage/greenery in the diet and this bit should pull back in on its own.
Please read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/platyfdgfaqs.htm
Bob Fenner>
Re: Platy problem
2/27/19
Thanks a lot. I’ll keep trying.
<Way to go Laura. BobF>
Platy fry 1/3/19
Ok so this may sound like a dumb question but here goes. I’ve got 2
female Platies, my male died about a month ago. This evening I started
seeing fry in my tank. Got my nursery tank set up and started moving my
fry. What I noticed is that I have 2 very distinct fry. A larger orange
with black and some considerably smaller almost transparent. All seem
vigorous and healthy. I’m wondering can they be from the same mother or
is it just a weird coincidence that both females were pregnant at the
same time and delivered at the same time?
<These two different fry could be from the same or either/both mother/s,
females. Young can vary, and are often more color-less when first
born... and the females can/do store sperm in their tracts for
months...>
I’ve been trying to catch someone in the act but no luck. The one I
suspect of giving birth is mostly white with a thick orange stripe and
black tail. The other is a smaller orange/red with a black tail. Any
help you can give would be greatly appreciated!
<The vent area should be translucent in the one/s giving birth, and
close to it. On close inspection, you can/may actually be able to see
the dark eyes of the fry in their mother. Bob Fenner>
Baby Red Mickey Mouse Platy
12/1/16
I have a week old baby platy, I am currently feeding it just the same
fish flakes we feed the parents at the pet store. Is there anything else
I could be doing to ensure its health? I am concerned since he is a
tropical fish and he is currently only in a bowl with no heater. should
I run out and grab a bowl heater?
<Probably. Standard issue Platies (like your Mickey Mouse Platy)
should
be kept around 22-25C/72-77F. If you live somewhere warm, or have the
central heating cranked up into the 20s Celsius/70s Fahrenheit, room
temperature may be fine. But for most people in places cooler than the
subtropics or with their homes heated to more normal temperatures, yes,
a heater is a requirement. Variatus Platies (a distinct, and less common
species of Platy) can handle cooler temperatures.>
Any additional information about this specific fish would be great!
<Platies are not hard to care for. A newborn will be fine in a tank
upwards of 4-5 gallons, but adults will need more space, certainly 15+
gallons for a small group. They need good water quality, and the fancy
varieties (like yours) are less hardy than the wild fish, so keep a
close eye on filtration and weekly water changes. Zero ammonia and
nitrite, as usual. But water chemistry is important too; the water needs
to be hard, the harder the better in fact. Aim for 10+ degrees dH, pH
7.2 to 8.5. Platies are fish from ponds and pools rather than rivers or
mountain streams, so gentle water currents are preferred. A simple
air-powered sponge is absolutely ideal. So far as feeding goes, aim for
plant-based foods; Spirulina flake is an excellent staple. Newborns also
enjoy hard boiled egg yolk in tiny quantities (literally, a few crumbs).
They'll nibble on algae in the tank too.>
Thanks so much!
<Welcome. Neale.>
Have I been sold a female Platy? 6/5/16
<Yes>
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Platy Birthing I think I messed up T_T
1/8/16
Ok so hello there first of and thank you for reading this!! Ok so a little back
story, I have 3 sunburst and on bleeding heart (the male) no I had giving up on
them breeding seeing as they have been in the same tank for over a year now with
nothing. Well I came home yesterday to 3 fry in the tank. I immediately took the
father out of the 10 gallon and moved him to the large 25 gallon tank I have
with my tetras. I moved the females to their own breeding boxes but now its been
12 hours from the last fry and I'm worried I stressed the females to <too> much.
They are back in the tank now and are doing the *hide in corners/caves* and
still are not eating. I even tempted them with some bloodworms (which they
usually eat so fast that I have to put them in one at a time or they over eat)
and they didn’t even blink. I'm really getting worried now that I may have
stressed them into aborting the babies.
-Many Thanks
First Time Platy Momma
<Mmm; well; it may be that there were only three babies to be born; or that
moving the females caused parturition to cease, pause. I would leave all as is
for right now; and stay observant. Bob Fenner>
Platy Birthing I think I messed up T_T Neale's
Take 1/10/16
Ok so hello there first of and thank you for reading this!! Ok so a little back
story, I have 3 sunburst and on bleeding heart (the male) no I had giving up on
them breeding seeing as they have been in the same tank for over a year now with
nothing. Well I came home yesterday to 3 fry in the tank. I immediately took the
father out of the 10 gallon and moved him to the large 25 gallon tank I have
with my tetras. I moved the females to their own breeding boxes but now its been
12 hours from the last fry and I'm worried I stressed the females to much. They
are back in the tank now and are doing the *hide in corners/caves* and still are
not eating. I even tempted them with some bloodworms (which they usually eat so
fast that I have to put them in one at a time or they over eat) and they didn’t
even blink. I'm really getting worried now that I may have stressed them into
aborting the babies.
-Many Thanks
<Hi Taylor. Do not use breeding traps for adult fish. NEVER. These are mis-sold
to inexperienced aquarists. They stress the females and lead to miscarriages.
Instead, use the traps to corral fry after they're born, and keep the fry in the
traps for 2-3 weeks, after which point the adults usually ignore them. Do stock
the tank with floating plants; Indian Fern is the best, easily purchased, and
provides excellent cover for newborn fry as well as stressed females. Look among
the plants each morning, and transfer any fry to the traps. Do also try stocking
the tank with at least twice as many females as males. Finally, do understand
Platies come from ponds and other still water habitats. They dislike strong
water currents (just look at their dumpy shape!) and will do a lot better in
tanks with gentle filtration. An undergravel or even a sponge filter can be used
with great success. They are largely herbivores, so a good algae-based flake
together with occasional fresh green foods (such as cucumber or softened
courgette) works well for them. Platies should not be kept in tanks smaller than
15 US gallons; anything smaller, and yes, they will feel cramped and unable to
behave normally. Cheers, Neale.>
Mickey mouse platy maybe preggo?
10/6/15
<Eight Megs...>
We are new communal fish tank owners (thanks to our 3 yr old son!! :-D). I LOVE
watching them, they are very interesting :-) We have had the fish for about a
month and my female Mickey mouse platy has gotten somewhat fat/wide and looks
like she may be pregnant. The only 'dark spot' that I can see is behind the
female parts on the fin, not very dark. (wrong terminology?!? Sorry!)
<I understand you>
The wide part looks somewhat dark when she is in the right light.
<Oh! Tis not the fin itself that changes color, but the vent area (communal
opening for sex and excretory products) immediately above and behind the anal
fin... clearish itself, w/ the babies eyes appearing as dark, small dots near
parturition>
We have these 2 male guppies (who are BFF's) and they just started showing
interest in her within the last 2-3 weeks. They aren't mean to her at all, just
follow her around. Anywho, I attached 3 pics, they aren't very clear-sorry the
fish are quick and didn't want to use flash and blind/confuse them! Sometimes
she will hang out on the bottom of the tank- not for too long- and she is very
active, usually all over the place and seems very happy. I am trying to give as
much info as possible! If she is
pregnant, how long till she will have babies? Is she pregnant?
<Just looks fat to me; but female livebearers are often permanently pregnant...>
I just don't know if I should get a breeding tank?? Any info would help!!
Thanks for you time!!!
<You could acquire a bit of live or faux floating plant.... See WWM re
Myriophyllum, Egeria, Ceratophyllum.
Bob Fenner>
Mickey mouse platy maybe preggo? /Neale 10/7/15
We are new communal fish tank owners (thanks to our 3 yr old son!! :-D). I LOVE
watching them, they are very interesting :-) We have had the fish for about a
month and my female Mickey mouse platy has gotten somewhat fat/wide and looks
like she may be pregnant.
<If there's ever been a male alongside her in the last, say, six months... then
yes, chances of being pregnant is very high. These fish are more or less
continually pregnant when kept with males.>
The only 'dark spot' that I can see is behind the female parts on the fin, not
very dark. (wrong terminology?!? Sorry!)
<No problems. The famous "gravid spot" only really holds true for Guppies and
other small livebearers. It's not a patch of colour, but the expanded dark sac
around the embryos being pushed against the thin muscle wall around the vent. On
small fish, this dark sac is visible. But on bigger fish like Platies and
Mollies, it's often not visible.>
The wide part looks somewhat dark when she is in the right light. We have these
2 male guppies (who are BFF's) and they just started showing interest in her
within the last 2-3 weeks. They aren't mean to her at all, just follow her
around.
<Indeed. Closely related, and will surely try and mate with her. No chance of
fertilising her though.>
Anywho, I attached 3 pics, they aren't very clear-sorry the fish are quick and
didn't want to use flash and blind/confuse them! Sometimes she will hang out on
the bottom of the tank- not for too long- and she is very active, usually all
over the place and seems very happy. I am trying to give as much info as
possible! If she is pregnant, how long till she will have babies? Is she
pregnant?
<See above. But also be aware of constipation and dropsy. The former is quite
common when herbivores, like Platies, aren't given plant-based foods (Spirulina
flake for example) and fresh greens (slices of cucumber to graze on are good).
Can be treated with Epsom salt and more green foods. Dropsy looks similar, but
the scales rise up so the fish has a pine cone
appearance viewed from above. It's a serious issue. Fluid retained inside the
body, abdominal swelling, often related to bacterial infection. Both
constipation and dropsy are covered elsewhere on WWM.>
I just don't know if I should get a breeding tank??
<Not for the female, no. Very stressful for them. But by all means corral fry
into a trap for 2-3 weeks until they're big enough to swim with adults.
Some tetras (such as Black Widows) and most cichlids (including Angels) are very
predatory towards fry. May need to keep the fry in the trap or ideally another
aquarium for longer.>
Any info would help!! Thanks for you time!!!
<Cheers, Neale.>
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Terme... Platy... repro. and fungal dis.
7/21/15
Hello Neale,
Terme, the first platy, the first fish I acquired just over a
year ago is not well. She has given, in this past year, 4 healthy babes. I've
just done a water change and cleaning. I've isolated her in a clear container
hooked on the lip of the tank. She can see her mates.
<Nonetheless, do be aware these breeding traps are in themselves stressful.>
Her anal fin is virtually gone, caudal fin is tattered a bit, dorsal fin is
flatter, 1 pectoral fin has fuzz on it as of this a.m. Indeed, the prognosis is
not good. She eats but half heartedly and her motion is, naturally, wobbly. I
don't know what to do for her.
<The fact she's eating is actually a good sign. Treat, promptly, for Finrot and
Fungus. In the UK there's a useful medication called eSHa 2000 that treats both
simultaneously. In the US you may be able to find similar products such as
Kanaplex. The addition of salt to the water can be helpful for all livebearers
that are ailing, but this does depend on other tankmates. Assuming your tank is
all livebearers, then up to 5g/litre is worthwhile. It won't treat in itself,
but salt reduces osmotic stress and often perks livebearers up remarkably
quickly. The important thing though is to avoid Melafix, Pimafix and other "all
in one" medications that generally do very little once a fish is genuinely sick
(they might have some use as a preventative when fish are damaged but not
actually sick).>
I had noticed the wobble perhaps 2 weeks ago. All else looked fine. The fin
damages seem like a rapid onset. This is my first death of a fish. What do you
do with the remains?
<Assuming you're not near a natural waterway, then simply burying the corpse in
the garden is effective.>
All else is basically well and good. I certainly hope to find you well and in
good spirits.
<Thank you.>
The Best,
Grace
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Terme... 7/21/15
Thank you so much Neale, I will take your notes with me to 'the guy' today.
<Glad to help.>
this a.m. while changing the water in her container, the 'bracelet of fuzz'
drifted off and I was able to, at least, pull that out of the container.
<Good.>
If at liberty to anthropomorphize, I would say that while it seems indeed
somewhat stressful to be reduced to a smaller space in her container, she also
seems a bit relieved to not have to directly interact and can rest, while still
being a part of...
<A fair analysis.>
In any event, thank you again. I will report.
Best,
Grace
<Cheers, Neale.>
On further observation. Re Platy dis.
7/22/15
and some research at the novice level, my best guess is the virus Lymphocystis,
at worst Saprolegnia...I believe the former of those two.
<Is this for the Platy? Never seen Lymphocystis in any of the Poeciliidae.
Tends to be overwhelmingly associated with "advanced" fishes -- cichlids and
spiny eels in freshwater tanks, and pretty much any Perciform fish in
brackish/marine tanks. Viral infections are typically untreatable, but triggered
by some type of external stress. In any event, Lymphocystis is fairly
distinctive, with cream to cafe-au-lait coloured growths, often but
not always textured rather like cauliflower.>
Sapro calls for imidazoldinone, malachite green (apparently banned in the U.S.)
or Methylene blue.
<Saprolegnia is name widely used, probably without good cause, for certain types
of fungal infection. To be clear: without examination under a microscope,
identifying a fungus is hard. Fortunately, caught early on, fungal infections
are relatively easy to treat.>
I don't see good instruction for delivery of Formalin to a single fish in a
confined space.
<Do not use formalin! Toxic. Nasty.>
Concerns seem to be more for me (gloves, inhalation etc. cancerous toxin) than
the fish.
<Indeed!>
Also, I wonder about the singular stress introducing that her. I will check with
'my guy' at our best local shop tomorrow. For now, I figure to simply give her
water changes in her isolation container and continue to feed, as she is eating.
<Viral infections are untreatable for all practical purposes, but a good
external fungus/bacterial treatment such as Kanaplex or ParaGuard should do the
trick without the need to ID the exact pathogen.>
Just wanting to know of your thoughts, Neale.
Best as usual,
Grace
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: on further observation 7/22/15
Yes, this is my eldest Platy girl (7 in all)...not giving up...
Thanks again for excellent info. I'm so grateful I've gotten your email moments
before heading out to 'the guy'...full report to follow...
Best,
Grace
<Glad to help. Good luck, Neale.>
Re: on further observation. 7/23/15
Dear Neale,
<Grace,>
Happily, 'the guy' was in complete agreement with you, thus bolstering my
confidences on both sides of the ocean.
<Cool.>
I purchased the Kanaplex and gave an initial dose yesterday afternoon. The
Kanaplex instructions read as if I were to place the med inside some food source
and deliver. This is an ill platy. I took some tank water and dissolved the
portion of powder in it and poured into her container. I repeated that process
this a.m. after changing her container water. So, 'fresh' water and 'fresh' med
daily.
<It's not a product I've used, but provided you follow the instructions
carefully, should work well. Be sure to remove carbon from the filter, if used.>
He wanted me to purchase a 2 gallon hospital tank, heater and filter etc. along
with the meds, but I needed to decline for sake of finances. She is in her
container with water from the tank that is heated and filtered, the container
hung from the lip of the tank inside the tank. I figure OK, perhaps not
ideal....He recommended at least 4-5 days of meds to see if a good turn around
effect takes place. This suggests she could be returned to the tank after that.
He suggested only vegetable matter to be given for a week after cessation of the
meds...We were in agreement that the tank itself should not be arbitrarily
dosed.
<Fair enough.>
What do I need to see from her before placing her back in the tank or is it a
matter of how many days she's been on the meds and likely to be clear of
infection?
<You'll want to see some noticeable improvement. One Finrot and Fungus are in
decline, the fish usually heals quickly provided ambient water quality, etc.,
are good. Perhaps complete a full course as recommended by the manufacturer;
isolate in breeding trap inside main aquarium for a few days so she can benefit
from good water quality and social interactions; if all
continues to look good, release into the main aquarium. When she's back in the
tank, consider isolating any males for a few days to prevent her being
pestered.>
Your excellent thoughts please!
The Best,
Grace
<Most welcome, Neale.>
Re: on further observation. 7/23/15
Neale,
While the Kanaplex calls for 'every other day 'up to 3 doses', I dosed her in
the non-filtered container in the late afternoon yesterday, and again this a.m.
<Any particular reason?>
So, I will count this a.m. as #1. My guy suggested that one cannot really
overdose this stuff. (As we were figuring the 1/4 amounts of the tiny, tiny
spoon supplied. I figure all of us can overdose on all sorts of stuff and
therefore, maintain a strict quantity application. I've never used this stuff
either.)
<It's Kanamycin, an antibiotic, so unlikely to cause the fish harm if used in
reasonable amounts. But overdosing may affect the filter bacteria, which is a
much bigger deal...>
She does seem perkier. Hopefully not an illusion from my rose coloured glasses.
There are no males in the tank. Pestered, indeed. She ate her flake food and
salad this a.m.
Next purchase will be the breeding trap so that I may release her, in
quarantine, into the main tank. Thanks for that. But, not to get ahead of
ourselves. A day at a time!
Should I be seeing the pectoral fins actually growing in more fully?
<Dead tissue/off-white edges should vanish quite quickly, even overnight;
regrowth may take a bit longer, but by no means imperceptibly across a few days,
a week.>
Best,
Grace
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: on further observation. 7/23/15
Well. It was the guy's notion to begin dosing immediately after getting home. He
encouraged the daily container water changes with 'fresh' med supplied daily.
<Seems reasonable. Supposedly, most aquarium medications are usually neutralised
within a day, by the biological filter if nothing else.>
After fully determining the exact, tiny spoonful amount yesterday, it was only
after this a.m.'s dosing that I returned to read the duration of dosing, the
round, as we say. That's when I read their 'every 2 days for maximum of 3
doses.'
This conflicts with the guy's notion of daily dosing and can't overdose....so, I
decided to begin the every other day today, and call yesterday's dose a measure
for The Good.
<It's an antibiotic, Kanaplex, so I wouldn't be overly worried about getting the
dosing rate off by a day or two.>
And, since not dosing the tank itself, the filter is in no danger...
<Quite.>
Best Regards As Usual,
Grace
<Good luck, Neale.>
Re: on further observation. Neale, please 7/25/15
Ahh, with your good and gentle guidance and some re-orientation of my
thoughts, it strikes me that if her water is changed out daily, because it
is a small container lacking specific filtration and aeration, then the med
must be renewed daily as well.
<Yes, provided you really are changing all the water in the container. Is
this like a plastic Tupperware or something? I'm guessing so. Remove the
fish with a net, empty all the water out down the drain, refill with
aquarium water, add medication pro rata. Make sense?>
If it degrades fairly quickly anyway, then I feel good about dosing daily
for about 6 days...then, if all looks better, returning her to the tank
with the breeding trap in place for a week or so...
<Cool.>
Thank you so much Neale,
Best,
Grace
<Happy to help, Neale.>
Re: on further observation
Yes. Really and truly. Changing all the water! The container was purchased
at an aquarium shop and is a clear, solid plastic (I assume). All is
occurring as you say...
<Cool.>
Will forward a happy (one hopes) update soon...(sooo glad you are out
there)
Best,
Grace
<Glad to be of use. Neale.>
Re: on further observation
Yes. Really and truly. Changing all the water! The container was purchased
at an aquarium shop and is a clear, solid plastic (I assume). All is
occurring as you say...
<Cool.>
Will forward a happy (one hopes) update soon...(sooo glad you are out
there)
Best,
Grace
<Glad to be of use. Neale.>
Possibly undeveloped male Platy? 7.15.15
Neale,
Hello, how are you?
<All's well, thank you!>
I'm having some confusion over the sex of my Platy I'm hoping you can shed some
light on. I have a 10 gallon tank, ammonia and nitrite zero,
nitrate 5 ppm, two sponge filters. A year ago I set up this tank and purchased a
female Platy who then gave birth to 20 babies. The tank spiked in ammonia and I
struggled for some time trying to get the ammonia under control and
still feed the babies at least four times a day. The adult Platy died after
about six months, and I gave most of the babies to the pet store except for
three. The babies were raised on flake food. One out of the three showed to be a
male and in March of this year I donated him to a fish club. In the meantime,
the remaining females have been pregnant and having babies, one baby at a time
it seems, here and there.
<Young adult female Platies may have smaller than expected, but oftentimes we're
talking about predation on the brood, so you only see one or two surviving the
first night. Adding floating plants such as Indian Fern can help.>
Now being July, babies are still coming, although I know the females can hold
the sperm for 6 months or so (The babies are being raised in a separate tank
this time around).
<Evidence for Platies producing six months' worth of youngsters is lacking.
That often-quoted stat refers to a specific fish, the Dwarf Mosquitofish if I
recall. For the common farmed livebearers, two or three broods per insemination
is probably the rule.>
At one year old, both my Platies are petite in size compared to a normal adult
Platy- they are an inch long and their overall body mass is much smaller than a
full grown Platy.
<Genes, or environmental shortcomings while they were young, can play a part in
explaining this.>
One Platy is obviously female because it's super pregnant right now, and the
other one may not be pregnant, however, it's anal fin looks like a fan- I do not
see a gonopodium.
<Sometimes males take a while to manifest the expected fin shape. While rare,
it's far from unknown. These "effeminate" juvenile males may explain the
supposed female-to-male transitions occasionally described for some livebearers
but never observed in the wild or under lab conditions. It's telling that all
the reports of sex changes in Swordtails (for example) are
people quoting the story, and I've yet to meet anyone who has actually seen it
themselves!>
This one is smaller than the other obvious female, but it's fan shaped anal fin
doesn't even look pointy. In addition, back in March when the third Platy was
present, who was definitely male (had obvious gonopodium), that male only chased
the one female that is now pregnant, but I thought this was due to the fact that
she's bigger in size compared to the other female.
Now my dilemma- last night while observing them, I think my two "females" were
mating!
<See above. Just because it looks like a female, an "effeminate" male would
still think and behave like a male.>
The one in question kept backing its tail up to the pregnant one, then would
twitch its tail. I don't see any intense chasing going on though, but when the
pregnant one is near the other one, "she" backs up "her" tail (they're facing
opposing directions) and its tail gets all twitchy! That's mating, right?
<Yes indeed.>
So I'm wondering, since I definitely do not see a gonopodium, could this Platy
be an underdeveloped male?
<Correct.>
And can an underdeveloped male mate and have babies?
<Depends on whether sperm get injected into the female. If they do, despite the
limitations of the existing anal fin, then sure, he could fertilise her. But if
he can't get sperm physically inside her, then no.>
I'm so confused because it literally looks like two females mating. So far I
have nine babies since April, with more on the way. Thank you! -Lorie
Lorie
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
RE: Possibly undeveloped male Platy? 7.15.15
Your help is very insightful Neale, thank you. As far as predation of the brood;
I've seen the babies swim around the adults and they do not seem interested in
them at all.
<Often aren't, but do be aware that Poeciliid livebearers don't really have an
instinct about what their fry look like. So while herbivorous, any small
wriggling thing at the surface of the water can be viewed as potential food,
such as a mosquito larva. In the wild the fry hide among plants and in very
shallow (literally, an inch deep) water where the adults can't go.
So evolution assumes the fry and the adults won't meet, but in the aquarium, of
course, that isn't the case. As stated: floating plants help.>
When I find babies in the tank, the adult female is still pregnant (gravid spot,
fat). I believed because of her small size; she's still pregnant when babies are
found; and no interest in the babies; that she literally was having a few babies
at a time, although I don't really understand why she doesn't have them all at
once, if I am correct in my assessment.
<Hard to say. Dwarf Mosquitofish are, I believe, unique in producing a
succession of fry, one or two a day, across a period of weeks. Other livebearers
(in the hobby, at least) produce batches of fry released all at once. Perhaps
discuss with the folks at the American Livebearer Association, for example; they
have a forum.>
I found two more babies last night; the female now looks slimmer but still
obviously pregnant.
<Do bear in mind bloating/constipation is pretty common among livebearers and
produces swelling regardless of pregnancy.>
She has had babies at least 5-6 times since March, all the while still looking
pregnant afterwards.
<See above.>
Also, if I understand correctly, the male that was present in March could not be
responsible still for the babies she's having today?
<Unknown. The record for producing fry after a mating is six months, and that's
applied to the Dwarf Mosquitofish. Whether other Poeciliidae are comparable is
unknown to me, but it's usually assumed Guppies, Platies and so on can produce
two, perhaps three batches after a single mating. More than that is not
something I've seen in the hobby literature, but again, a specialist might be
able to offer more detailed advice. Also review superfetation in the Poeciliidae
via Google Scholar, etc., for an overview of the subject.>
If that's the case then my "effeminate" male must be fertilizing her eggs (I
kept two females because I did not want any more babies, haha!).
<Would seem plausible. Cheers, Neale.>
RE: Possibly undeveloped male Platy? 7.15.15
I'll look into your suggestions. Thanks again! -Lorie
<Most welcome. Neale.>
Platy with possible dropsy and platy pregnant?
2/13/15
Hello!
Currently we have 2 adult platy fish and 3 young ones about 1 months
old.
The zebra platy has a area (highlighted in pictures) where the scales
seem to be fluffy/pineconing/furry looking/sticking out? Sorry about the
picture quality as these guys do not hold still to pose. I was wondering
if by looking at the zebra platy you can tell what this is and if it's
dropsy?
<Dropsy is usually around the abdomen, rather than above the muscle
blocks of the "tail" part of the body. So my guess here is this isn't
typical Dropsy, but some sort of fluid build up inside the muscles. Hard
to be specific what's happened here. Could be a tumour I suppose (not
uncommon among farmed livebearers) but could just as easily be the
result of physical damage, a bit like swelling around a broken ankle. If
the fish is otherwise fine, then the old Epsom Salt treatment might work
well; the
recommended dosage is 1-3 teaspoons per 5 gallons/20 litres, for as long
as it takes. Carry on with water changes as normal, and don't forget to
add the appropriate amount of Epsom Salt to each bucket of water, so if
it's a 3-gallon bucket, you're adding 0.6-1.8 teaspoons of Epsom Salt.>
The orange platy either super bloated with sickness or pregnant? What is
you opinion on her?
<Again, it's a bit unclear what's going on here, but the Epsom Salt
approach could help.>
The 3 babies the mother died right after giving birth and my husband
said her carcass virtually exploded when he dropped her in the toilet.
:(
<Which says more about how quickly small bits of fish meat decay in warm
water than anything else...>
We did not know she was pregnant but she kinda looked like the orange
fish does. A few days after her death I noticed these itsy bitsy baby
fish virtually impossible to see and now they are growing each day.
<These problems are fairly common amount farmed (inbred, low quality)
livebearers. Ensuring good water quality and appropriate water chemistry
will help, and don't forget Platies are low-end tropicals, so keep them
as 22-25 C/72-77 F, ideally towards the lower end of that range, and
certainly no warmer. Heat stress can cause all sorts of problems.>
I appreciate your help! If there is some treatment I would like to get
it started to save the little ones and especially if the red one is
going to have babies.
Linda
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.> |
|
Ammonia/Baby Platies 7/10/14
Hello Neale, how are you?
<All good.>
I have a 10 gallon tank, HOB filter (Marineland Bio-filter 100
GPH), heater, which I had set up for 4 weeks with a little bit
of food added to it. After 4 weeks I tested the water- 0 ammonia and
nitrite, 5 ppm nitrate. At this time I added a female Swordtail (I
thought she was a Platy). A week later I added a female Platy (did not
retest water at this time). Within hours of adding the Platy, she had
babies. I now have 20 babies in a breeders cup.
<What's this? Do you mean a breeding trap that goes in the aquarium?>
The babies are 12 days old. I am feeding them Hikari powered food for
fry and occasionally frozen brine shrimp. I feed them twice a day,
although over the weekend I fed them three times a day.
<More, smaller meals best; 4-6 is recommended for newborn fish. Their
digestive tracts are very short and store little food, and starvation is
a very real problem for baby fish that would eat continually (algae,
detritus, aufwuchs, plankton) in the wild.>
I feed the two adults twice a day, but only a flake "the size of their
eye" each. I have been doing 10% water changes every 3 days, for fear of
overloading the filter. Wednesday I tested the water and ammonia is .5
ppm! Since setting up the aquarium, I have not changed the filter
cartridge. Tuesday I did a 10% water change, and after testing the water
Wednesday, I did a 20% water change. I wanted to do a 50% water change
but was afraid this would be too drastic for the babies. Do you think I
can go ahead with a 50% water change?
<Yes.>
My plan is to do water changes every day until ammonia is at zero, 50%
today if that is okay, then probably 20% each day after. Or, just 20%
every day until ammonia is at zero. What do you think?
<Some combination of these will be fine; change as much as you can
provided water chemistry, temperature are kept constant; if you can't be
sure about these, then more frequent but smaller changes better.>
I also added some floss to the filter box to increase the surface area
for bacteria to grow. I fed the babies crushed flakes this morning (I
only feed what they can eat in 3 minutes). I was thinking of stopping
the
powered food, since it's so fine and dense, considering the ammonia
problem.
<Quite so; it's easy to overfeed these foods. Do allow your baby Platies
something to graze on, e.g., a flat rock under a bright light (for green
algae) or an air-powered sponge filter (for organic detritus and algae).
This latter is actually an ideal way to run a livebearer aquarium
generally, whether adults or juveniles.>
I did not feed the adults this morning. I don't have another tank to
move the babies to, but was considering setting up a 5 gallon, with
sharing the filter media from the main tank and maybe using one of those
bacteria additives to speed cycling (your thoughts on these products?),
<Redundant if you can "clone" a mature filter by removing some if its
live biological media and putting into the new filter. Mature filters
can donate as much as 50% of their media without problems, though it
will take at least 6-8 weeks for the mature filter to recover fully with
regard to maturing any replacement media you put in there.>
if that would be a good idea to help the babies. Although I've read from
others that moving the babies to another tank resulted in deaths.
<Only if water chemistry, temperature are dramatically different.>
I plan on giving the babies to the pet store when/if they make it to
where they are old enough to be donated. The adults so far seem ok, but
one of the babies looks like he is dying. I'm mainly concerned because
of the babies; I'm afraid too many water changes/interventions could
kill them, so I'm not sure how to handle this problem. Any guidance,
advice would be greatly appreciated! Thank you, Lorie
<Would direct you to this accumulated FAQ, here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/livebrrreprofaqs.htm
No real magic to breeding livebearers such as Platies, provided they get
enough food. Do bear in mind the basic needs of Platies, which include
lowish temperatures (22-25 C/72-77 F) and hard, alkaline chemistry.
Predominantly algae eaters; rich food can cause health problems
including obesity. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ammonia/Baby Platies 7/10/14
Thank you for your advice and quick response! I can keep water
chemistry/temp constant, so I will do a 50% water change tonight and
continue water changes/testing until ammonia is at zero. Yes, by
breeders
cup I meant breeding trap; I have 19-20 babies in the trap.
<Cool.>
The adult Platy and Swordtail still seem very interested in the babies
even though 12 days have passed. I would like to let the babies out of
the trap; I will be acquiring floating plants soon. Do you think at 12
days they can be released?
<Depends on their size; 3 weeks is about right but it really depends on
how predatory your Platies are. In short, try it out, and if not
completely successful, you can be more careful with the next batch of
fry.>
They still look to be about the size of the Adult Platy's mouth (she's
big, Neon Blue Platy), and of course I don't want them to be eaten.
<Indeed.>
Also, do you think I should work towards setting up the 5 gallon and
separating the babies from the main tank (because of the ammonia
problem/other possible benefits of separating)?
<Unless you want to rear large numbers of offspring, a small (e.g., 5
gallon) rearing tank isn't particularly cost effective or even
worthwhile. Put another way, if you trap some of the fry for a couple
weeks, and let them take their chances with their parents thereafter,
you'll always have at least a few survivors per brood. Multiply that by
a monthly deposit of 20-30 fry per adult female, and over a year you'll
still get more fry than you can possibly keep. However, if your plan is
to rear as many fry per batch, and take those batches to a fish shop,
club or fishkeeping friend, then a rearing tank will be invaluable.
Easier to feed the fry, easier to keep the tank clean, and altogether a
safer, better environment. Mortality will be much lower. A 5-gallon tank
isn't economical in this situation though as it'll be too crowded even
before the fry are big enough to rehome. But a 10-15 gallon tank could
work.>
The filter media in the main tank is one of those carbon cartridges, so
I'd have to take a knife and cut half the filter pad off; I don't know
if that's really sufficient for sharing with another filter though
(which is why I was considering the bacteria additive).
<I see. Not a huge fan of carbon (absorbs medications for example) so
some "butchery" might be worthwhile. You can often jam useful amounts of
filter floss into filters, even when designed for proprietary (read:
expensive) filter cartridges.>
I have rocks in the main tank but there's really no algae to graze on. I
do own a sponge filter- should I set that up along with the HOB?
<Alongside the hang-on-the-back filter likely a useful addition.
Depending on its size, perhaps a replacement even, but allow the two to
run for a couple months together so the sponge charges up with filter
bacteria.>
Since you mentioned the babies should be fed 4-6 times a day, I will
increase their feedings (small meals) but probably decrease the adults'
feedings until the ammonia is back to zero.
<Exactly.>
Are goldfish flakes more appropriate than tropical flakes for Platies,
since I believe goldfish flakes have more greens in them?
<Likely so, but I've no experience. I prefer to use Spirulina flake
food, but your idea is worth a flutter. Maybe alternate them for a few
weeks, the tropical and the goldfish food, and see how the fish do.>
Thank you Neale! -Lorie
<Most welcome.>
Re: Ammonia/Baby Platies 7/10/14
Alright, well I have a plan of action here. Thanks again for your input
and guidance!! It's most appreciated! :) -Lorie
<Most welcome. Neale.>
Platy fry tummy not bulgin
7/5/14
Thanks so much for your website. We have found it very helpful in
raising our platys.
<Glad to hear it!>
Quick question: We have a panda platy fry who's stomach is no longer
bulging like the other fry in the tank. The fry is 5 months old and
eating well and had bulging abdomen before. Should we be worried?
<Nope.>
Below is the panda fry and a pic of its sibling below with bulging tummy
for comparison. We have total of 6 fry and this one is the only one not
bulging.
<Do bear in mind it's rare for all fry in a single batch to reach
maturity.
That would never happen in the wild, and even in the more secure and
better resourced environment of an aquarium, there are all sorts of
reasons why fry don't survive. Some fry are simply weaker because of
genetics, others because of developmental problems. So the best approach
is to watch and see what happens with fry, euthanising any that are
clearly going to fail (such as ones unable to swim) and those with
deformities you wouldn't want to pass on to the next generation (such as
kinked spines). Sometimes
separating smaller fry from bigger fry can be helpful if the smaller
ones are having problems getting enough to eat, but otherwise focus on
the big picture, trying your best to keep as many fry healthy by regular
water changes and frequent (4-6) small meals per day.>
Thanks!
Carol
<Welcome, Neale.>
|
|
fry feeding; platy
4/28/14
Just found your website and learned a lot! My question is I have five 3
month old fry in a 5g tank. All are healthy and happy.
<Cool.>
We just have a fry born 3 days ago and I place it in the fry tank as
well.
Except the older fry are hogging the food.
<Yes, will happen.>
Should I worry that the newborn is not getting enough food?
<Yes, potentially. What often happens even within a single batch of fry
is the faster growing fish (often the males) outgrow the slower growing
fish (often the females) resulting in skewed sex ratios.>
I try to drop food right on top of the newborn to ensure feeding.
<Indeed. Or try to ensure all fish can graze on algae (assuming we're
talking about livebearers here, such as Guppies or Mollies). An
extremely good ploy is to use a sponge filter inside the tank that the
fry will peck
on all day, especially if there's a bright light over it to stimulate a
bit of algae growth. A couple hours sunshine works just as well. Another
good trick with livebearers is to add some floating plants, even
Duckweed if all
else fails, as their roots catch particles of food as well as algae,
providing alternate grazing spots. This won't prevent hogging at feeding
time, but will mean the smaller fish don't starve to death, which can
happen.>
The second question is about the schedule of feeding for the 3 month
old.
I've been feeding them twice a day. When do I taper the schedule to once
a day? The adult platy I feed once every 2-3 days (the ones in the 10g
tanks)
<With fry a good rule of thumb is the more, the better, but keeping
portions small. So with newborns up to, say, 6 weeks old, 4-6 meals per
day is good. After that, up to about 3 months, then 3-4 meals if
possible. If the fry can graze (as described above) then deliberate
feedings of powdered flake or brine shrimps needn't be so frequent. In
the wild livebearer fry will almost entirely feed on algae and
"aufwuchs" so in theory you can even
rear them in mature tanks with plenty of algae! So long as their little
tummies are nice and rounded, while water quality is good, you're doing
fine.>
Thanks a bunch!
Carol
<Most welcome, Neale.>
Pregnant Platy 10/21/13
Hello all, I am really impressed by your informative responses to most
fishy questions.
<Ahh!>
I set up a tank about a month ago 1 male platy to 1 female platy. She
was pregnant and could see the fry's eyes. However, I had to go to work,
checked on her in the morning she was fine, checked on her when I came
in was fine checked on her before I went to bed and she was dead. She
looked like she had given birth as no eyes or gravid visible, but unable
to find any fry.
I'm assuming they have been eaten as also housed them with White Cloud
Mountain minnows.
<Mmm, usually Tanichthys will leave livebearer fry alone... Unless the
White Clouds are very large, and hungry>
My tank has plastic plants. So I'm not sure if it was stress of labour
or the male platy who never left her alone. I have read up on platys and
now realise he's a randy little devil and I have since set up a second
tank did the cycle etc and put him in there with new 3 female platys.
(He's over the moon). Now I have a pregnant platy...again and want to
try and avoid another death. I would like to raise some fry and again
she has a gravid spot and I can see fry's eyes these have appeared over
the last few days.
Roughly how far on would this indicate she is?
<Typically parturition within a week or two>
She is silver in colour and has a pink/reddish tail. I am trying to find
out when to separate her I have one of those hatching things so the fry
can sink to the bottom compartment, does she need some separation?
<Sooner is better than later... I would move her now>
as my male platy keeps bothering her and I don't want her stressing out.
Thanks for your advise, Ann Marie
<Thank you for sharing. Bob Fenner>
Pregnancy separator 7/30/13
Hi there. I've been doing as much research as possible because my
Pineapple Platy is pregnant! She's in a ten gallon tank with four neon
tetras and one other female pineapple platy. We got her three weeks ago
and was pregnant when we bought her. According to the fish store clerk
she was in a tan with males two weeks before we bought her. She is very
large compared to the other platy and has a dark red spot with small
black spots inside (fry's eyes I assumed) so we got a pregnancy
separator so when she drops her fry they won't be harmed by the other
fish or the filter. We think she will
drop sometime this week so I put her in the separator but she freaked
out and I was afraid she'd hurt herself and/or the babies. I'm not sure
what to do. I don't want to take her out because she's very attached to
the other platy (the were also in the same tank when we got them) but
I'm afraid shell hurt herself in the separator. Should I put her in and
hope for the best? Thanks so much.
<I'd leave the female where she is... and be looking for another and/or
larger aquarium. You'll be needing more space if you're going to raise
young. Bob Fenner>
Injured platy fry 4/3/13
Hello there ! I have previously sent you an email about a "pregnant
guppy female" in a very tiny tank , it turned out that the guppy was a
male and after me buying a larger tank he seemed to get better :) after
having this tank for a while I got 2 female and 1 male red wag tail
platy (yay !!) . I arrived home on April fools to find 5 platy fry in my
filter (it has water in it) and 2 in the main tank , 4 of the ones in
the filter were alive and I fished them out an put them in my older tank
, I managed to rescue one out of the main tank but when I was trying to
catch it in my net I accidentally pushed it against the wall of the
tank. It seemed fine at first by upon further investigation I could see
that the ends of its tail I shredded and from the base of its Tail it
swollen and slightly bent downwards and has turned a milky grayish
color. It seems to be swimming around with the other fry but when it
doest swim and sits there it sometimes (like 1 out of 10) it starts
floating tail first towards the top , is there anything I can do to help
it or should I put it out of its misery ,
<If it were me, mine, I'd just wait/see. Often enough, these physical
injuries fix themselves>
I feel awful because it survived its parents and now I could be the
cause of its death (its my first batch of fry).(I apologize for the
quality of the picture but you can see where it starts becoming lighter)
Thank you . Kind regards Amber
<Cheers, Bob Fenner>
|
|
Xiphophorus hybridization 11/15/12
hi i have a few questions, i want to hybridize platys with swordtails.
<Farmed Platies and Swordtails are hybrids already…>
i know there already hybrids to begin with but i want to breed these
together anyways to make my own unique hybrids.
<I see.>
i read that a male X. variatus will inseminate x helleri females but a
male helleri wont typically inseminate x variatus females.
<Not sure that's true. Indeed, I'm fairly sure it's false.>
now, i have male black Redtail variatus platies and 2 female Redwag
swordtails. now what setup would you recommend?
<Both are low-end tropicals that need hard, alkaline water; 22-25
degrees C, 10+ degrees dH. Otherwise, the key difference is Platies
prefer slow water current while Swordtails do best with a moderate
current. Both are of course algae-eaters more than anything else.>
(1male variatus to 1 female swordtail) or 2 male variatus to 1 or 2
female swordtails?
<More males than females.>
and what size tank should i use to get them to breed together?
<Platies 20+ gallons, Swordtails 30+ gallons. This reflects their
different sizes and the fact Swordtails are much faster swimmers and
more active. Plus, male Swordtails tend to be substantially more
aggressive than male Platies.>
i want to create my own variety of Mickey mouse swordtails by using
Mickey mouse x. maculatus to female swordtails. but i read everywhere
that swordtails and platies hybridize "freely" yet every time I've tried
to mate x. maculatus to x. helleri they never mate they just swim up n
down the glass ignoring each other :(
<Curious.>
should i use a male Mickey mouse maculatus to a female swordtail or 2 or
3 or use a male swordtail to female Mickey mouse maculatus???
<They do cross-breed freely, but whether the offspring are worth keeping
is a whole other thing. Furthermore, Swordtails do tend to be more
predatory towards their fry than Platies.>
what setup would work the best??
<Lots and lots of floating plants will be key -- somewhere for fry to
remain safe while you collect them every day.>
thank you.
<Do obtain virgin females of the species you want, keep with the male
you want for a couple weeks, then remove Hope this helps, Neale.>
Platy sick...but from what?? & repro. f'
10/20/12
Hello,
<Tracy>
I have 3 Platies in a 10 gallon tank, all the chemistry is fine.
<Based on what?>
I just did a 20% water change yesterday. For 2 days the Mickey Mouse
Platy has been sitting at the bottom but will come up for food and will
go for it and beat the other Platies to it. The other Platies
didn't really eat it but the MM did. The MM is the pig of the
three, she eats the most. I think maybe she is stressed and constipated.
I gave her Epsom salt twice in tank
and fed her a green pea or two....she is still acting all stressed,
dorsal fin down, and stressing out way to easily, which is not normally
like her.
<Did anything pass after you used the Epsom and fed pea?>
She was the one who was the happy go lucky and like to nip and chase and
play. She looks okay on the outside, and i am thinking maybe she has a
bacterial or viral infection internally.
<What led you to this conclusion?>
No reason to think parasites, at all.
<Why not?>
Just fed them TetraColor and TetraMin flakes only, but I do admit I
overfed, to make sure that one of them got enough to eat, cuz she always
ate less, smaller bites....and this one and the 3rd one ate a lot.
<They won't starve if they are eating at all.>
..the MM ate the most. She looked bloated at first to me, but now I
realize she just doesn't feel well, she always had a lot of food in her
belly. No way can she be pregnant cuz she was less than 4 months old
when i got her..
<How do you know the age and how long have they been in your tank? Did
you get her from the breeder or from a store? Also, do you have a
male in that tank? Livebearers can breed at a surprisingly young
age.>
.still growing. I was told to only feed them peas for a few days and see
how she is doing then...but I am scared she is going to get worse if she
has an internal bacterial or viral infection.
<If the condition worsens, be ready to use antibiotics.>
She doesn't look like she has dropsy yet, as her fins are NOT pointed out.
I am scared that whatever is wrong she is going to get worse. But she
does want to eat, so that is good unless she doesn't ever poop. I was
told the peas act as a laxative.
<Again, have you seen any results from the peas? My first
inclination is that the fish is indeed gravid, preparing to drop her
fry.>
Please advise.
<Monitor and note any changes for better or worse. Look for additional
symptoms, especially red markings on the skin. - Rick>
Re: re: Platy sick...but from what?? /RMF
10/20/12
I took my water in, and everything was normal, they checked everything..
<Mmm, not everything is check-able>
I do my small water changes once a week, religiously!
I change my filters when needed. I keep their water clean!
If the MM is pregnant, then she got pregnant at Dallas North Aquarium
before I bought her.
<Happens>
She did look big in pics I took on Oct. 6th.
I had read that they could not get pregnant until 4 months old which it
said that is when they are full grown to their 2 to 2 1/2 inches.
<Mmm, I disagree... can/do "become pregnant" at smaller size, younger
age>
She was way shorter/smaller than that when I bought her on Sept. 26, she
was listed as between small an medium size...less than full grown for
sure, very obvious. The bumble bee and her were much smaller than the
Red Wagtail. I fed them too much apparently and no veggie based food or
frozen veggies and both the bumble bee and the MM got bigger and big
stomachs. I can see through how full they are. Since I got the MM, the
Red Wagtail started eating less and does not have a big stomach anymore,
normal sized.
The sick MM was/is the Pig of the tank!
I was overfeeding the MM because she ate most of the food...I had to put
out extra so the Red Wagtail could get some food.
No, unfortunately, I have not noticed any poop from the sick MM. If she
does not get better (or give birth)
Question: What kind of antibiotics should I give her, considering
I have no idea what kind of internal bacterial or viral infection she
has?
<See WWM re... am not a fan of such use w/o real demonstrable possible
benefit>
The others Platies are pooping fine and feel great, but one pooped
white, but wasn't all long and stringy. I also saw short strings of red
poop on the gravel. The one that pooped white feels great.
The reason why I do not believe they have parasites is because another
expert who has proven himself to me time and time again told me this:
"White stringy feces can be a sign of a bacterial digestive infection, a
viral digestive infection, or possibly some kinds of parasite. It
can also be an indication of an overly rich diet, consumption of
vegetable matter that did not agree with them, consumption of meaty
foods that were starting to decompose, consumption of fungus-based foods
(or moldy food), liver failure, or any of a number of other things... It
is unlikely that domestic raised fish would have any parasite (your
platies are DEFINITELY domestic raised)."
<Mmm, while I do agree w/ most of the above stmt., it may well be that
these domestically raised fish are infested... many to most are...
coming either from Florida or imported from the far east... ONLY
livestock that is captive produced (in aquariums) locally is likely to
be parasite-free>
The sick MM has had her dorsal fin up sometimes now and is swimming
normally but kind of fast, cuz she does not want to be messed with.
Then she goes back to her place.
I did buy Veggie Spirulina flake food by Aqueon at PetSmart. Only brand
there that had it for Tropical fish.
I will alternate it with the TetraColor and TetraMin when the fish are
all better.
Question: Can I feed the Veggie Spirulina flakes to the Platies after
tomorrow? It will have been 3 days without flaked food, and the two that
aren't sick did not eat it yesterday, I think they nibbled a little on
it today. If not, how soon?
<Can, and only time will tell>
Question: I think it could be Constipation and Stress, but then
again she IS wanting to eat.????
<Can't say from here... >
Please, please, please advise. I really need your help. Thank you,
<Please review what we have archived re this species... Start here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/platies.htm
the linked files above. Bob Fenner>
Sincerely,
Tracy
Re: re: Platy sick...but from what??
10/20/12
I read online that Platies cannot possibly get pregnant at such a young
age of 2 months or so,
<Mmm, can do so shortly after this time in my experience>
Today she is feeling better, and actually had her dorsal fin up when I
fed the peas, but she is still stressed, I know why now, being bullied
by one of the other Platies, and they both like to be with third Platy,
so I think I should get one more Platy soon...I heard they do better in
pairs.
<Trios... more females than males>
Her gills were pinkish/red when I got her, they did get a little redder,
and I will keep an eye on that. But, she is feeling better today, still
haven't seen any string of poop from her, but maybe she will poop today
since she ate another pea.
The reason why I wrote no reason for parasites is because another expert
told me this, when I asked him about short white poop:
"This is another case of non-veterinarian giving out not entirely
accurate or necessarily clear information.
White stringy feces can be a sign of a bacterial digestive infection, a
viral digestive infection, or possibly some kinds of parasite. It can
also be an indication of an overly rich diet, consumption of vegetable
matter that did not agree with them, consumption of meaty foods that
were starting to decompose, consumption of fungus-based foods (or moldy
food), liver failure, or any of a number of other things... It is
unlikely that domestic raised fish would have any parasite (your platies
are DEFINITELY domestic raised)."
Please respond with your comments on what i just wrote, or
recommendation for me to do next.
<Read where you've been referred... especially re "Platy System FAQs"...
am wondering if you have suitable water quality... temp., hardness,
pH...
BobF>
Re: re: Platy sick...but from what?? /Neale
10/20/12
I took my water in, and everything was normal, they checked everything..
I do my small water changes once a week, religiously! I change my
filters when needed. I keep their water clean! If the MM is pregnant,
then she got pregnant at Dallas North Aquarium before I bought her.
<Easily possible. Female livebearers can have anything up to 6 broods
following mating, with each brood around a month apart, so for if
they're ever kept with males, it's almost certain they'll be pregnant.>
She did look big in pics I took on Oct. 6th. I had read that they could
not get pregnant until 4 months old which it said that is when they are
full grown to their 2 to 2 1/2 inches.
<Size doesn't matter for fish any more than humans. It's age that
matters. Female livebearers are capable of breeding at around 3 months
of age, males are fertile and able to father offspring at about 2 months
of age.>
She was way shorter/smaller than that when I bought her on Sept. 26, she
was listed as between small an medium size...less than full grown for
sure, very obvious. The bumble bee and her were much smaller than the
Red Wagtail. I fed them too much apparently and no veggie based food or
frozen veggies and both the bumble bee and the MM got bigger and big
stomachs. I can see through how full they are. Since I got the MM, the
Red Wagtail started eating less and does not have a big stomach anymore,
normal sized.
The sick MM was/is the Pig of the tank! I was overfeeding the MM because
she ate most of the food...I had to put out extra so the Red Wagtail
could get some food.
No, unfortunately, I have not noticed any poop from the sick MM. If she
does not get better (or give birth) Question: What kind of
antibiotics should I give her, considering I have no idea what kind of
internal bacterial or viral infection she has?
<Use a combination against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria; in
the US, the use of Maracyn 1 and Maracyn 2 is frequently recommended in
such situations.>
The others Platies are pooping fine and feel great, but one pooped
white, but wasn't all long and stringy. I also saw short strings of red
poop on the gravel. The one that pooped white feels great. The reason
why I do not believe they have parasites is because another expert who
has proven himself to me time and time again told me this: "White
stringy feces can be a sign of a bacterial digestive infection, a viral
digestive infection, or possibly some kinds of parasite. It can also be
an indication of an overly rich diet, consumption of vegetable matter
that did not agree with them, consumption of meaty foods that were
starting to decompose, consumption of fungus-based foods (or moldy
food), liver failure, or any of a number of other things... It is
unlikely that domestic raised fish would have any parasite (your platies
are DEFINITELY domestic raised)."
<Actually, it's extremely common for farmed fish to have gut parasites.
Most tropical fish come from farms in the Far East where medications
rather than hygiene are used to minimise losses. In practical terms this
means they factor in a certain number of fatalities, and price their
livestock accordingly. This ensures mostly healthy fish at a low price,
but does mean intensive farming is commonplace, and that in turn means
cross-infection of parasites is very common. With this said, though
parasites may be common, even ubiquitous in some cases, most of the
tropical fish we buy are healthy enough that any low level infections
don't cause problems. It's only when fish are stressed that the
parasites multiply sufficiently quickly to cause real harm.>
The sick MM has had her dorsal fin up sometimes now and is swimming
normally but kind of fast, cuz she does not want to be messed with. Then
she goes back to her place. I did buy Veggie Spirulina flake food by
Aqueon at PetSmart. Only brand there that had it for Tropical fish. I
will alternate it with the TetraColor and TetraMin when the fish are all
better.
Question: Can I feed the Veggie Spirulina flakes to the Platies after
tomorrow? It will have been 3 days without flaked food, and the two that
aren't sick did not eat it yesterday, I think they nibbled a little on
it today. If not, how soon?
<Spirulina flakes are a recommended staple for livebearers, but should
not be used while treating fish for constipation because they'd have the
opposite effect. Plain algae (such as Sushi Nori) would be okay though.
Otherwise, stick with the cooked/canned peas, spinach, etc. Feel free to
stick an algae-covered rock in the tank for the Platies to graze upon;
algae is something like 90% of what they'd eat in the wild, and the
perfect food.>
Question: I think it could be Constipation and Stress, but then
again she IS wanting to eat.????
<For sure. Cooked peas and spinach will provide good nutrition for
herbivorous fish like Platies. But it does take weeks for fish to
starve, and if constipated, the focus has to be clearing out the gut
before returning to dried foods.>
Please, please, please advise. I really need your help. Thank you,
Sincerely,
Tracy
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Re: re: Platy sick...but from what?? - 10/22/2012
Oh, I did read everything on your Platy site, and am just more confused.
Sucks
<Your water quality test measures? BobF>
Re: Re: re: Platy sick...but from what??
<Hi Tracy>
The water is fine, we do have hard water here. PH is fine, they checked
all that. I take very good care of the water...regular water changes,
change filters, clean filter media, I am very good about taking care of
my tank water and fish. But something is wrong with her.
<The water sounds like it is not related to the problem.>
I did see her rub the side of her face against the submersible heater,
although her gills are normally reddish anyway.
<One time may be nothing. If she rubs again (called flashing) it may
indicate problems.>
I will feed her a pea again today and look for poop string.
<Look specifically for a segmented string, like sausages. That indicates
parasites. Otherwise, it should be pretty solid.>
It has been too long for her to have a big stomach like that and not
already dropped the fry. I do not even believe she is pregnant. Actually
her color is better and dorsal fin is up sometimes, but it is not even
like her to not want to play. I think it has to be constipation. Maybe
it will take another day. But I read on your site that the rubbing on
her face could be a gill bacterial infection. I also read that it is bad
to treat them for parasites or infections or anything they do not have.
<Right, treating for something that isn't a problem is not suggested.
That's how humans helped to create antibiotic-resistant strains of
bacteria.>
I am very frustrated...and do not know what to do. There are NO fish
Vets anywhere. So i guess i am screwed until what?
I don't know.
<A fish vet would probably be pretty expensive anyway. Would it be
possible to get a photo of this fish so we can see the shape of the
belly?
Gravid livebearers often have a distinctive shape. Otherwise, I'd
just continue feeding with pea and keep a close eye on her. - Rick>
Re: Re: re: Platy sick...but from what?? - Sabrina's Go, Part A
<Firstly, Hi Tracy, I'm Sabrina. I thought I might try to clarify
some
things from your previous correspondences with Rick and Bob and offer my
own views as well.>
Today she came out but seemed stressed but did swim around while I was
feeding the fish peas.
<This does sound like an improvement, yes?>
Although I believe she was hungry earlier, when I fed the peas, she did
not eat any. However, her dorsal fin is up more than ever.
<Great!>
I wish you could just tell me what is wrong with her and what and how to
medicate with.
<You know, Tracy, I wish so, too. That would make life so much
easier! Unfortunately, like many/most things in life, fish disease
is not something with a miracle fix, or even a certain diagnosis, in
this and many cases.
The symptoms you've described.... big stomach, clamped fins,
transparent string from the vent, etc., are all symptoms, and just like
how in humans fever, upset tummy, and chills can be symptoms of cold,
flu, food poisoning, food allergy, internal infection, and more, the
symptoms you've described really can be attributed to many different
causes, from simple constipation to parasites to bacterial infection to
organ failure. There just isn't an immediate answer. Even
improper environmental conditions could contribute, which is why the
actual readings for Ammonia, Nitrite, Nitrate, pH and hardness are so
very important. Hearing that someone tested "everything" and it
was all okay really gives us zero information about the environment the
fish is in, which is why we kept asking for that.>
Is it contagious, do I need to treat the whole tank and the other fish.
<It could be contagious, especially if it's a parasite. Or it
could be entirely not contagious, if it's simple constipation, or
(worse) organ failure causing the fish to retain fluids. Some of
the possibilities have fixes, and others (like organ failure) just
don't.>
I swear, none of you experts agree on anything.
<It's not so much that no one can agree, but that there are just so many
possibilities that, even if we saw the fish with our own two eyes in our
own tanks, we might still not be 100% sure what the cause may be, or how
or even if it could be fixed.>
And since there are no Fish Vets, I amXXXed!
<There are some fish vets, actually, but they're very few and far
between. The very few I've met would probably be saying something
similar to what any one of us has said, and if you asked three different
vets, you might even get three different answers, because the symptoms
are so common to such different complaints.>
Sorry, but tomorrow is my birthday, and I have to go to the god XXXX
dentist, my beloved Stepmother of 30 years died unexpectedly 2 weeks
ago, and she was my best friend too.
<This is most unfortunate.... Tracy, I am so very sorry for your
loss.>
FTW (XXXX the World...a tattoo that Tommy Lee has)
<When crap comes, it comes in waves, doesn't it?>
If it wasn't for the Silver Surfer, my dog, I wish I would have been the
one to die.
<Hon, it seems to me you're in a pretty bad spot right now. I've
been in bad spots myself, and I know what it's like for life to suck.
I won't say I know what you're going through; I don't, only you do.
But I've had my share - more than my share - of hurt, and I know I've
wished the same at times. The way your words indicate that you're
feeling is frightening, Tracy. Life can seriously suck, and it can
be really, really hard to work through it. But I do absolutely
promise you that everything always does work out, one way or another.
Try to remember that, and try to hold on to the things that are
important to you in your life - Silver Surfer, your Stepmother's memory,
anything you hold dear. And bear in mind that, as much as life can
suck at times, the awesome parts are just so, so awesome....>
I am going to get drunk, wake up with a XXXX hangover, and then have to
get my teeth drilled on. Do I deserve it. XXXX no.
<Hey, at least getting your teeth drilled is a very temporary thing.
There's totally an end in sight to that, right? You'll live
through it, and then you'll have better teeth. It's worth it.
And hangovers....
Well, drink an equal amount of water for every alcoholic beverage you
have, and maybe that'll help some, it does me. Or maybe you'll
just pee a lot.>
Sorry, but I had to vent...do not have my Stepmother to talk to anymore.
<I do hope very much that you'll find someone to talk to. You DO
deserve the support that you so clearly need right now. Losing
your Stepmother is an awful thing, and even though I totally don't know
you, I'm pretty sure your Stepmother wouldn't have wanted you to have no
support through this tragic time. Honor her memory by taking care
of yourself, and giving yourself the support that you deserve.
Perhaps you have a friend that would let you lean on them a bit, or if
not, it might be really helpful to talk to someone professional, like a
counselor or a pastor or anything like that. Even just joining a
club - like a fish club! - where there are folks that share a common
interest will help. Life DOES get hard, and you DO deserve to have help
when you need it. No one gets through life without needing help
during rough times, and you're not alone in the world. You've got
people around you to help - you may just have to reach out to them.>
Tracy
<Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Re: Re: re: Platy sick...but from what?? Sabrina's Go, Part B
I have some new information:
Right now, the sick MM has a very long, about an inch and a half or so,
of white and clear string coming out her back end. Will you please
tell me what that means?
<This is a symptom that, like many of the other symptoms you've
described throughout the correspondences with the Crew, can indicate
many different things.... With all luck, it's that she's starting
to pass any gut blockage. It could mean much more dire things,
too, and without looking at some of the "poo" under a microscope, it can
be tough to say.... and may not be definitive even then. I would
say, at this point, it'd be best to cross your fingers and hope for the
best.>
Thank you, -Tracy
p.s. Sorry I had a nervous breakdown while i was emailing you
before.
<Happens.... Do please take good care of yourself. You're
the most important person in your whole world. Best wishes always,
-Sabrina>
Re: Re: Re: re: Platy sick...but from what?? - Sabrina's Go, Part C
I do not understand how the Spirulina Veggie flakes can have the
Opposite effect than veggies such as peas and spinach??
<Often, Spirulina flakes contain quite a bit of stuff like fish meal and
shrimp meal, which are very high in protein.>
Opposite to veggies to me would be meaty food.
<Like fish meal and shrimp meal, right?>
Anyway, last night, the MM Platy had a long inch and a half string,
mostly clear, but small part white.
All the platies went to sleep.
Then, at about 11:00am the MM was all happy and back to normal and
loving on me. Yay!
<Yay! This is wonderful news! Hopefully it was just simple
constipation.
I would still advise that, the next time you have your water tested (or
even better, get kits and test it yourself), have the shop tell you the
actual readings, and write them down, and then do a bit of poking around
online to see how your water compares to water that platies like.
Hopefully it really is great, but then at least you'll know.>
I think the Red Wagtail Platy does not like the peas or the Spirulina
Veggie Flakes and is upset about that.!
<She'll give in eventually, I'll bet.>
But all okay now...thank you for your support and getting back with me.
Very much appreciated.
<Once again, I'm glad the platy is doing better now, thank you for
letting us know.
Tracy
<Do please take good care of yourself, Tracy. I do wish you the
best.
-Sabrina>
Fry tank issues and medicating fry.
6/24/12
Hey crew! I've written before and you are all so awesome with your
expertise! The hobby is very lucky to have you!
<Thanks for these kind words.>
I've been having issues with my platy fry tank. In the past,
I've never been able to keep fry alive for longer than a couple of
months, but I had them in a plastic breeder trap back then.
<Ah, now, fry should be released from the trap once they're about 10 mm
long, which is usually within 6-8 weeks. Water circulation within the
traps isn't great, and that causes problems with water quality if
nothing else once the fry get above a certain size.>
This time around I decided to keep them in their own tank because all my
females decided to drop fry at the same time and I ended up with like 30
of them! My set up includes a 10gal tank with two sponge filters: one
rated for 20 gals and the other for 10 gals. I've recently been losing
fry. They just seem to drop dead.
<Shouldn't do. Platy fry are very tough and easy to rear (by fry
standards, anyway) provided you're offering the right basic conditions.>
I'll check on them before bed and they are all swimming around and perky
and I'll wake up the next morning and find 1 or 2 dead or close to
death.
Now my first instinct would be water parameters, like ammonia or nitrite
problems, but both are zero. Ph is 8.2, gH 14, kH 7, nitrate 10, and
temp 80 deg (maybe that's too high?).
<Darn right! Platies are low-end tropicals (Variatus Platies are
subtropical fish) and need to be kept relatively cool, around 22-24 C
for standard Platies (and around 18-22 for Variatus Platies).>
Now, the tank has been up and running for approximately 4 months. I
initially had problems with ammonia, (not getting over 0.25ppm) due to
my inexperience with sponge filters and maintenance, but I learned a lot
of lessons and now the tank has been ammonia free for over a month. I
seem to be losing more fry now than when I had ammonia. Maybe from the
stress? All fry seem to exhibit the same symptoms and the onset is
sudden: lethargy, frayed fins, crashed on the bottom, and loss of
appetite. I don't see any physical problems like spots or anything.
<All fry, including livebearer fry, benefit from a combination of small
but frequent meals (ideally 4-6 meals/day) and regular water changes
(10% daily is good, but the more the better, provided water chemistry
stays more or less steady). Siphon out detritus from the bottom of the
tank if you can, or use a turkey baster to pipette it out; either way,
the less "gunk" in the tank, the healthier your fry will be. Don't be
afraid to use a bare-bottomed tank -- a plain glass aquarium with just
the sponge filter and some floating vegetation (Indian fern is ideal,
but ordinary pondweed will do) for shade. You don't need (or want)
gravel, rocks, etc in a fry-rearing aquarium. Anything that traps food,
faeces or bacteria is BAD.>
Again, most times the onset occurs so quickly that they are already dead
in a matter of hours. I attempt to remove the sick ones to a small 2 gal
tank and treat with salt and Methylene blue, but they never recover.
I've been adding salt to the tank along with stress coat additives to
try and reduce stress so they do not get sick, but it seems to be in
vain. At this point, I'm not sure what else to do to prevent more fry
from dying besides keeping great water parameters by cleaning and doing
water changes more often, adding salt, and adding stress coat products.
Do I dare medicate the water in case I have some kind of epidemic? Is it
safe to medicate fry and which meds are safest?
<Both Methylene Blue and salt are safe for Platy fry. But there's no
need to use either routinely; only use them if you need to. I would use
a little salt, 2-3 grammes/litre, if the water was soft, and remind you
that livebearers need hard, alkaline water and no tropical fish should
be kept in tanks with water from a domestic water softener.>
I know to expect some fry loss, but I've lost maybe half of them. That
seems like a lot. I've started to feed them antibiotic medicated food
just in case (Minocycline). Maybe I just have to roll with the losses at
this point due to the earlier problems, I don't know. Any advice would
be most excellent! Thanks. ~Hannah~
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
How early can one sex Mickey Mouse platy fry?
6/17/12
Hello again. I'm back with a new question. This time its regarding my
Mickey Mouse platy fry. They are now a little over two months old now,
(and yes, have been moved into the tank with their mother, Cheung Po, my
platy male, Calico Jack, and my loaches. Captain Kidd and Teach had to
be moved to the smaller tank because they were harassing the fry.).
Anyhow, I am preparing to send three of these platy fry off to their new
mama, and I wanted to send off three females. Now, is it too early to
try and sex the fry?
<It is not... look carefully at their anal fins... should be rounded,
fan-shaped... as opposed to tubular, male gonopodia.
Bob Fenner>
Re: How early can one sex Mickey Mouse platy fry?
Well the three I picked to send her are not only the biggest and best
colored, but also all have fan shaped anal fins. So I guess I'm good.
Thanks.
<Ah good. Welcome. BobF>
My Angel Fish .. and others ... :), Platy repro.
4/30/12
Evening all,
<Celeste>
My name is Celeste and I have fish! I am a beginner fish lover so please
be nice, In my main tank .... I have a 50 litre tank
<Will/need more room>
it has some gravel stones along the bottom, Some granite type rocks, a
piece of dark drift wood, 4 different types of living plants and a big
barrel. I have a Hailer - HL-BT400 Internal Filter, and a tubular heater
( looks like a thermometer ) set at 28 degrees. I have a few fish in
this tank, 4 Angels ( I don’t even know if they are male or
female >.< ),
<Likely a mix... and when two pair... they will cause trouble for their
tankmates>
11 Neon Tetra’s ( 2 of these are an orange breed .. Clear with
a bold Orange stripe.), and three Bristlenose catfish, I think I have
two male Bristlenoses and one female. One of the males has huge long “
Bristles” on his nose, the other male has just started growing his and
the third who I think is a female is about the same size as the second
male, she has no bristles ... however it may still be young? )
<Maybe>
... Anyway ...
The problem is my Angel fish ... I have two solid gold ones and two
white ones with black stripes. I have had the gold ones for around 8
months and they have been friends since I brought them. I introduced two
more about 4 months ago ... the white and black ones ... rooky move.
They fought and laid down the dominance ... however to this day I don't
think there has been a result. its more of a tolerance. Now they all
live together and feed together fine, no where near as many fights as
they are all around the same size ... but recently I noticed on one of
my Gold Angels ( the less stronger of the two ) started to get a red
edging to its outline ... I don't know how to explain it ... but ..
think of when you use a ruler and a permanent marker, you end up with a
stripe of colour on the edge of the ruler ...
<Good description>
its like that all the way around the body of the Angel, not on its fins
... just the body. I don’t know what's going on .... but I want to fix
it ... not wait till it dies.... Help ?
<Likely either an environmental issue (e.g. too much nitrate) and/or
behavioral manifestation from the four being in too-close confines.
Again, you need a much larger system or to move the Angels out. Read
here re:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwangelsysfaqs.htm
Tank two is a 20 Litre tank .. with a smaller Halier filter, the same
thermostat set at 28 degrees. It has a ground cover of gravel stones, a
small barrel, a bit of drift wood and a plant. In this tank I have
platy’s, One Female and Two Males. The larger Male is very mean to the
smaller Male, but I'm sure that's because of the female. ... The Female
had babies! I only noticed when I saw the two little babies come out
from under the drift wood to find some food. I caught them and put them
in a separator, one died and the other is very healthy and strong, I
think its bout 3 weeks old? The female is pregnant again so I will put
her in the separator soon. How long do I need to keep the baby out from
the older males?
<Till it is large enough to fare for itself... likely a couple months or
so>
I think the baby is a female as well just from the fins. .... I have
another tank with a goldfish in it ( my sons one ) we had a death ...
but I think its because the water was too warm and my son may have over
fed ....
Thanks for reading and keep up with the good web site, it has really
good advice!
Celeste.
<Cheers, Bob Fenner>
Can Platies have babies 24 hours
apart? 3/31/12
I have read over all the topics and am running out of time (literally,
I need to get off this computer!) Yesterday my platy had babies (came
home and she was 'flashing' against plants) so I was able to
gently persuade her into the breeder box
<Did you read anything here at WWM? We DO NOT recommend or advise
putting adult fish in breeder boxes… much better to keep the adults
in the big aquarium (which for Platies, means at least 15 gallons) and
add some floating plants, even generic pondweed. Collect the fry up as
and when you see them, and put THOSE in the breeder box.>
and caught the 2 fry and placed them in my "baby tank" with 1
week old guppy fry.
<What's the "baby tank"? Do understand the fry need a
decent sized aquarium… 5 gallons at least, and preferably 8+.>
I placed floating plants in and around her box and turned out the
lights. She was there for about 8 hours, still saw babies in her belly
(in the light, round things with black dots) and she had a white, open
vent. Then, my other platy started showing signs of near delivery so I
placed her in a 'homemade' breeder box in a dark area with
plenty of plants. 4 hours later, no babies from either.
<Female Platies are essentially pregnant all the time if they've
been with males in the last few months. So, just because a female Platy
is behaving oddly, don't assume pregnancy is the reason. In fact,
it's hardly ever the reason.>
Platy #1 I took out of box and sent her back to main tank hoping she
would finish releasing her fry and put fry #2 in the breeder box in
tank (she looked smaller, could only see 1 or 2 round things with black
dots - no babies in breeder box).
<Miscarriages are common in breeder boxes; see comment above about
not using them. Plus, adults can be predatory towards newborn fry, or
for that matter, miscarried foetuses.>
So, here we are 24 hours later, neither have had any (more) babies.
Released Platy #2 to tank (I didn't see anymore round things in her
belly). But Platy # 1 still has what I think are babies in her belly,
she is swimming strangely (backwards, straight up and down, hiding in
plants, not eating anymore), and her white vent is still white and
open. Is it possible she will release rest of babies 24 hours
later?
<Perhaps.>
How long after they have birth until the vent closes (in my guppies it
was only a few hours and their bodies went back to
'normal').
<There's no connection. Don't think of these as humans but
as fish. There's no "labour" as such. In fact the fry are
not connected to the mother at all. Some fish do have a placental
connection between mother and foetus, but Platies don't. All the
mother Platy does is hold the eggs inside her, and the fry use up their
yolk sac just as if they were eggs laid on the ground. When they're
ready to swim free, the "delivery" itself seems to be very
quick. That said, pregnant livebearers can be stressed by poor
environmental conditions, cohabiting with males and from being cooped
up in breeding traps, and any of these can cause miscarriages or
worse.>
Also, platy # 2 (just released 30 minutes ago from breeder) is now
thrashing against rocks (she passes under light and looks like she
still has round things in her belly again, were babies just turned
before or too high in belly for me to see?) I am going to check her
gills to see if they are red and inflamed.
<Would you know the difference? The gills are red by default, and
without opening up the gill covers with a mounted needle and then
examining under a microscope, I certainly couldn't tell healthy
gills from damaged gills!>
We are due to for a water change today only because we just added more
fish a few days ago and I am trying to establish a new feeding/cleaning
routine with the addition of more fish in my tank.
<How big's the tank? What fish are you adding/have you added
recently?>
Cannot tell you parameters (don't have my test strips yet, have
been taking water samples to the store but haven't done this since
last water change) other than the ph is about 7.6 and the water temp is
about 76 degrees F. Thank you for your time and patience!
<Much more likely the problem is environmental or perhaps caused by
introduction of new fish either directly (aggression) or through
parasites being brought into the tank (e.g., Velvet, Whitespot).
Review, and act accordingly. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Can Platies have babies 24 hours apart?
4/2/12
Neale and WWM,
Thank you for your quick response! Sorry about the lack of info, lack
of sleepy causes unclear communication. Just wanted to clarify: the
"baby tank" is what we are calling our 10 gallon tank setup
for the fish babies.
<Sounds good.>
We set it up (lots of hiding spots - java moss, etc) using water from
our main tank (where the parents are). We do frequent water changes
(20% almost every day due to cloudiness due to food and not being able
to vacuum the gravel - found out too late gravel was not necessary)
<Quite so.>
We alternate using water from the main tank (good bacteria) and adding
conditioned water, similar pH and same temp. This is just a temporary
set up for all the fry (because we added a surprise group of Molly fry
this morning) until we can get the fish sold (arrangements in place) or
moved to permanent tanks (our own, friends, family, etc). How long is
it ok to keep this big group of approx. 40 fry together in the 10
gallon tank (2 week platies, 1 week guppies, 1-2 day
platies/mollies)?
<Several weeks, even 2-3 months. After about 3 weeks, most
livebearer fry are safe to put with adults of their species,
particularly if the adults are well fed and the tank contains floating
plants.>
We have plenty of "parents" in our 30 gallon tank ( approx 21
inches worth of platies, mollies, and guppies - which is 11 live
bearers plus 1 glass shrimp and a lil darter we caught in the creek).
We were doing bi-weekly 60-70% water changes (can't get hubby to
measure out properly) and gravel cleaning with our original fish we
started the tank with; but added 6 fish this past Wednesday and so I am
working on establishing 50% weekly water changes. After doing a water
change yesterday, they are swimming around much better today and the
surprise birth is encouraging that we are on the right path (hopefully)
to maintaining optimal water conditions and fish health.
<Sounds like it.>
The only reason I brought up about the gills is because I read a forum
(not yours) and it said to check but you're right that is
impossible. I have been Googling pics of fish with Ich and velvet and
it doesn't look like any of them have this plus my hubby says they
all look good (he swears he is the 'pro' in fish keeping -
snicker).
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Thank you for all your help and input!
<Most welcome, Neale.>
Re: Can Platies have babies 24 hours apart?
4/3/12
Dear Neale and WWM,
I believe I spoke too soon about the health of my fish. Tonight, I was
looking at the 30 gallon tank with the tank lights off and using a
flashlight to check on them before I went to bed. To my horror I can
see that all 11 of my live bearing fish have gold dust on them, I am
assuming they have Velvet. I have increased the heater to a warmer
temp, it is at 80 degrees now. What treatment and temp do you recommend
for my platies, guppies, and mollies???
<If this is all you have -- Platies, Guppies and Mollies, then using
aquarium salt will be the best approach. The minimum salinity is 2
grammes/litre, but I'd up that to 4-5 grammes/litre if you can
(some plants may be stressed at 5 g/l). Velvet is somewhat tolerant of
salt, and occasionally survives conditions that kills of Whitespot. In
any event, run the tank with salt in it for 2 weeks, and all should be
well. Cheers, Neale.>
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