What a nice surprise!

Soft, pH 6,5 and 27 C. I use no additives or RO-water. The tanks is 210 litres - 100 x 60 x 35 cm - with a fairly strong current and a huge sponge filter. There's lot of wood to hide under. They mainly feed on frozen artemia, krill and mysis.grokefish wrote:Excelent what are the water parameters and conditions in your tank?
Hi Daniel,daniel60 wrote:Thanks!
This is what the embryos are doing right now.
Yes, the fry on the first picture kept swimming for a minute in the photo tank. Now, they swim around just for a few seconds.sidguppy wrote:how do they behave? the first picture shows a swimming Tatia, but the second already the characteristic "don't mind me laying here, I'm just furniture" behaviour of Auchenipterids. they just lay about until you feed them? or do they mill around in a swarm at dusk or so?
The video just shows the fry before they started swimming around. Not much action there!sidguppy wrote:I can't see the video's, so I have to ask you. (quicktime messed up my PC a few times, so it's not going to be installed again)
I removed the eggs within a few hours, I think. The female was not guarding them (I don't even know which female it is). The first time the Tatias were alone, but a few days ago I put three adult Scleromystax barbatus and two Pseudohemiodon apithanos in their tank. None of the fish seemed interested in the eggs. Maybe the gelationous cover makes them difficult to eat? The cover seems to protect the eggs well, I haven't seen any fungussed egg at all.Marc van Arc wrote:Daniel,
What I can't tell from your posts is if there are any other fishes in that tank. If not, how do the adult Tatias behave with regard to the eggs?
Trachelyopterus species are known for not guarding but also not eating their eggs. Can you confirm this for the Tatias or did you remove the eggs shortly after you had discovered them?
There should be some weeks between the mating and the laying of the eggs, but you're the expert now.....daniel60 wrote: Does the female wait that long before she lays the eggs?