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Transporting a live Oxydoras Niger
Posted: 04 Mar 2008, 03:12
by skwerally
Hi,
I have a Oxydoras Niger aprx 2ft long. His name is "Slyvester" and I've had him since he was about 2" long (aprx 10yrs). I am moving about 10 miles away. He is currently kept in a 55 gal with 2 placo's. Would anyone know the best way to go about transporting them to my new location. Should I empty the tank to where there is just enough water for them to survive? Or I thought about maybe putting them in a large coleman cooler... I don't know.... I can't very well put them in a bag, (Sylvester is very VERY sharp!) I want the move to be as stress free as possible. Anyone have any suggestions. Any help would be much appreciated. Also, it is in the 30's here and I have to be out in 2 weeks. It takes aprx 20 minutes to get to the destination so, total time out of the tank (if thats the best way, would prob. be about 1hr).
Thanks for any help!
Re: Transporting a live Oxydoras Niger
Posted: 04 Mar 2008, 11:14
by Bas Pels
I would put him into a container not that much larger than the fish itself, as the low-water tank will probably stress the fish much more (due to problems handling it)
As its container will be - relatively -small, beware of the sun, it has more energy then we think, heating the water soon
Re: Transporting a live Oxydoras Niger
Posted: 04 Mar 2008, 12:40
by Richard B
I have been involved in the transport of large Niger (& other fish) many times before & it doesn't have to be too difficult. The fish was "netted"/cornered using a pole with a 'plastic tray' on the end (don't use a net or you could be there for ages trying to free it causing uneccessary stress) &then grabbed to move it to the transport box (a large white plastic box used as a quarentine vat (about 4x2x2 feet). When grabbing the fish it was wrapped in a wet dark towel that had had a plain water wash with no chemicals & kevlar gloves were worn (as used in the automotive manufacturing trade - these can be slashed with a surgical blade & no damage occurs to your hands, therefore the niger posed no problems to the mover). The moving box was half filled with water & when the fish was in, loads of floating plants were added before the lid went on - this serves 2 functions: it shades the fish making it dark & keeps the fish subdued & it also reduces the fluid movements of the water upper layers to stop the water sloshing around so much. 1 hour should be no problems whatsoever for this fish.
Never try to move a glass tank with water in - particularly witha large fish in minimal water - i can't stress enough how bad this idea is.
Was there anything particular not covered that you were concerned with?
(ps - is he kept in a 55g & is 2 feet long? What size is the tank? It seems very small, or have i misunderstood - a 2 foot fish like that should ideally be kept in a tank with a footprint of 8x4 feet - ie width twice the length of the fish & tank length 4 times the length of the fish)
Re: Transporting a live Oxydoras Niger
Posted: 04 Mar 2008, 15:04
by Bas Pels
Richard B wrote:The moving box was half filled with water & when the fish was in, loads of floating plants were added before the lid went on - this serves 2 functions: it shades the fish making it dark & keeps the fish subdued & it also reduces the fluid movements of the water upper layers to stop the water sloshing around so much.
I think this is a very good idea. however, would floating plastic (such as ping-pong balls) not be better: plants might use oxygen. They will certainly not do anything good to the water
Re: Transporting a live Oxydoras Niger
Posted: 04 Mar 2008, 15:27
by SOBERKITTY
I'll be moving in about 3 wks here is the forum thread I started. Lots of good ideas. I'll be using a very large insulated food cooler to move my fish.
http://www.planetcatfish.com/forum/view ... =4&t=22208
Re: Transporting a live Oxydoras Niger
Posted: 04 Mar 2008, 17:22
by Richard B
Bas Pels - pingpong balls might work, i don't really know. They sometime smell a bit plasticy when new so maybe leak something into the water? has anyone got that many ping pong balls - my brother hasn't & he plays for the county or something like that? A well fitting sheet of polystyrene might do it?
We had loads of water hyacinth at the time, so it was what was available & the shape & quantity made the water less likely to slosh around. The journey was only a couple of hours & everything was fine.
Re: Transporting a live Oxydoras Niger
Posted: 04 Mar 2008, 19:06
by Suckermouth
Richard B wrote:Bas Pels - pingpong balls might work, i don't really know. They sometime smell a bit plasticy when new so maybe leak something into the water? has anyone got that many ping pong balls - my brother hasn't & he plays for the county or something like that? A well fitting sheet of polystyrene might do it?
When I worked at a lab for a semester a sheet of polystyrene was used when we were bringing fish from the field to the lab. A bubbler was also used for aeration.