Corydoras - dealing with successive spawns?
Posted: 29 Jun 2017, 18:06
I've got a specific question, but first let me give you some background.
My Corydoras burgessi keep spawning, at intervals of 1-4 weeks. The spawns are usually fairly small (15 eggs) but sometimes larger (maybe up to 50 eggs).
I've not been very good with breeding Corys in the past, but I seem to be having a bit more luck with these, perhaps because I have learnt from my experiences with breeding Farlowellas.
The parents eat most of the eggs if left in the tank with them, although I have had a single survivor from a couple of spawns. Also the eggs are prone to fungus.
For the last couple of spawns I have moved the eggy moss into a 2-litre external breeder box hanging on the parents' tank, and hatched the eggs there. Hatch rate has been relatively low (20%) owing to fungus, but the fry which have hatched have mostly grown well with a good survival rate. The breeder box allows me to keep them in the same volume of water as the parents' tank while being protected from them, and I can feed them intensively. I've now tried adding alder cones and small red ramshorn snails to the breeder box as anti-fungal measures though I have yet to see if they work.
Once about 15mm long (4 weeks old) I moved the fry into a separate grow-out tank.
I'm now in a position where I have:
- Grow-out tank with 5x20mm juveniles (6 weeks old)
- Breeder box with 2x8mm fry (1 week old)
- Parents' tank with 5 adults and 2 older juveniles, and today's spawn of about 40 eggs.
There isn't really space for another breeder box on either tank.
So, to the questions:
1) If I put the eggy moss in the breeder box, will the 1-week old fry eat the new hatchlings?
2) If that's a risk, I could perhaps move the two fry to the grow-out tank. Would they then get eaten by their larger siblings?
3) Any other ideas?
Many thanks,
Paul
My Corydoras burgessi keep spawning, at intervals of 1-4 weeks. The spawns are usually fairly small (15 eggs) but sometimes larger (maybe up to 50 eggs).
I've not been very good with breeding Corys in the past, but I seem to be having a bit more luck with these, perhaps because I have learnt from my experiences with breeding Farlowellas.
The parents eat most of the eggs if left in the tank with them, although I have had a single survivor from a couple of spawns. Also the eggs are prone to fungus.
For the last couple of spawns I have moved the eggy moss into a 2-litre external breeder box hanging on the parents' tank, and hatched the eggs there. Hatch rate has been relatively low (20%) owing to fungus, but the fry which have hatched have mostly grown well with a good survival rate. The breeder box allows me to keep them in the same volume of water as the parents' tank while being protected from them, and I can feed them intensively. I've now tried adding alder cones and small red ramshorn snails to the breeder box as anti-fungal measures though I have yet to see if they work.
Once about 15mm long (4 weeks old) I moved the fry into a separate grow-out tank.
I'm now in a position where I have:
- Grow-out tank with 5x20mm juveniles (6 weeks old)
- Breeder box with 2x8mm fry (1 week old)
- Parents' tank with 5 adults and 2 older juveniles, and today's spawn of about 40 eggs.
There isn't really space for another breeder box on either tank.
So, to the questions:
1) If I put the eggy moss in the breeder box, will the 1-week old fry eat the new hatchlings?
2) If that's a risk, I could perhaps move the two fry to the grow-out tank. Would they then get eaten by their larger siblings?
3) Any other ideas?
Many thanks,
Paul