Raising Discus Our Way - Coastal Aquarium Society
Transcription
Raising Discus Our Way - Coastal Aquarium Society
One of the most rewarding sights in the aquarium hobby is seeing a proud pair of Discus carefully fan the nest and chase off “intruders.” Eventually they will escort the cloud of fry around the tank, as they herd them, protect them and teach them to fend for themselves. One of the most frustrating experiences is this hobby is to see a beautiful pair of fish eat spawn after spawn of eggs! If you are one of the lucky aquarists who has a pair that raise their own fry, sit back, relax, and enjoy one of the most rewarding experiences in the hobby. The only thing you need to worry about is what to feed the fry after they become freeswimming. We’ll cover this later. • Jack Wattley’s 3-Part TFH Article • Internet Information • General Disclaimer • • • • • • Temperature 82-86 Degrees Hardness – 180-190 (TDS) pH – 7.2 – 7.6 Water Changes – 50% Weekly Filtration – Sponge Filters & Rocket Filters Regular Tap Water - No R/O water or Buffers!! Sexing discus has always been problematic at best. • • • There is so much information available on-line. It seems that there are as many ways to sex discus as there are discus breeders! In our experience, the only sure-fire way to accurately sex discus is when they actually form a pair and lay fertile eggs! • • • • A recent article in a European publication called “Diskus Brief” described a method for sexing Discus that has proven to be very easy and highly reliable for us. The method uses "geometry" to determine sex. Your Discus must be mature fish for this to work. Otherwise they will all appear to be females. Picture a discus facing to your left ... you would be looking at it's side. Find the Dorsal and Anal fins and look where the fins slope down toward the tail. The Dorsal and Anal Fins become (almost) straight after the fins curve down (or up) toward the tail. • • • • Extend an imaginary line along this straight section of the 2 fins back toward the tail which just touches the Dorsal & Anal Fins past the tail. These two imaginary lines should intersect behind the fish. The key to sexing the fish is where the lines cross the Caudal fin. If they pass through the Caudal Fin, the fish is most likely a FEMALE. If they miss or just touch the Caudal Fin, then most likely it is a MALE. Discus can be housed and spawned in any number of aquariums, but here are some considerations: • 6-8 adult fish in a 55 gallon aquarium • Blind Date • 20 – 30 gallon “high” tanks seem to work best for individual pairs. • Bare-bottom tank • Blue LED “night light” • All lights are on timers • Sponge Filter • Diet • Slate (easily removed) Now that you have had a pair of Discus successfully spawn, and the eggs are in your tank, the next questions is “Now what?” If you have ever hatched/raised angelfish before, you’re light years ahead as the process is very similar. Long before your fish ever spawn, you should decide on the process you’re going to use to hatch them. We would recommend using a dedicated hatchery tank and an individual hatching jar for each spawn. While it may sound complicated at first, the process is very simple, and the pictures should clarify the process significantly. • • • • The hatchery tank is simply a 10 gallon tank that is filled halfway with water. The hatching containers with the eggs will be set inside the tank. A submersible heater adjusted to 82-84 degrees is attached horizontally to the back of the tank, along the bottom. This will maintain the proper temperature for hatching. A glass cover should be used to maintain the temperature and control evaporation. • • An airline attached to a 12” piece of rigid airline tubing, and an air stone provide the necessary water circulation. A sponge filter completes the setup. Using a 10 gallon tank as the “hatchery” allows you to add as many as 5 of the 1 gallon hatching containers (5 separate spawns) to the same tank without worrying about temperature. While we use a 10 gallon tank, you could just as easily use another size tank that you happen to have handy. • For hatching containers, we use 1 gallon, clear plastic containers that we picked up at Wal-Mart for about $2 each. These containers are actually canisters, for storing sugar, flour, etc. Generally, we allow the eggs to remain with the parents for a couple of hours after it appears that the spawning process is over. This helps ensure that enough time has passed to ensure that the eggs have been fertilized by the male. There’s nothing worse than pulling out a large spawn from your special pair only to find that you removed them too early and they are completely infertile. Once spawning has been completed: • Siphon water out of the spawning tank and into the plastic container, just up to the top line of the container. Don’t fill it too high or when you put your hand in the jar, water will spill all over the floor (and you). • Remove the spawning slate from the tank. Don’t worry about knocking the eggs off the object as they are very sticky at this point, and are actually pretty hard remove. • Place the slate into your container of water. Again, don’t worry about them being exposed to the air. They are out of the water for such a small amount of time that it will not affect the eggs in any way. • • Carefully lower the slate bearing the eggs to the bottom of the container. Try to stand the slate upright, leaning against the back of the jar, with the eggs facing the center of the jar. We then add 8 drops or Methylene Blue to the water. This will turn the water (and most everything in the container) a dark blue. No matter how experienced the parents, there will always be a certain number of eggs that are infertile. This can range from just a few, to as many as 50%. Roughly 24 hours after they are laid, any infertile eggs will become an opaque white. If left in regular water, these infertile eggs will become covered with a fuzzy fungus. If left untreated, this fungus will quickly spread to the good eggs, or newly hatched “wigglers” and kill them. Methylene Blue is an anti-fungal and when added to the water will prevent the “bad eggs” from getting coated with fungus and spreading to the good eggs. It will not have any adverse impact on the good eggs. • The entire hatching container is then lowered into the hatchery tank. The heater in the hatchery tank will maintain the proper temperature in all the hatching containers. It’s important to make sure the water level in the hatchery tank is approximately the same as the water level in the hatching container. A little less water is OK, but makes it harder for the heater to maintain a steady temperature. Too much water in the tank may cause the container with the eggs to float up and tip over….definitely not a good thing. Remember, as you add more containers, you will need to remove some of the water in the hatching tank or they will start to float! The last step in the process is to add an air stone to the container and put it as close to the bottom as possible. The flow of air should be strong enough to provide good circulation in the container, but not strong enough to dislodge the eggs. I would describe it as a “medium” flow. You can now sit back and take a break. Your job is done (for at least a couple of days). You should check on them periodically. After about 24 hours, the bad eggs will turn white. The fertile eggs will be a darker color, and if you use a flashlight (really the only way to see them through the blue) you will be able to see a dark spot inside the egg. Now you will be really glad you added the Methylene Blue! Discus always seem to spawn in the late afternoon or just before dark. At 84 degrees, discus eggs will generally hatch in about 60 hours (2 ½ days), but should be fully hatched after 3 ½ days. As they hatch, they may begin to fall of the spawning surface to the bottom of the container. That’s fine, don’t worry. If raised by their parents, the parents would gently pick them up and spit them back on the slate. Don’t try this at home! Trust me, the water tastes terrible! At this point, it’s time to transfer your wigglers to the nursery tank. • This is the heart of our discus rearing process. • Made of ½” PVC plumbing parts (cheap). • Can be adapted to any size tank. • While the rearing container is small, you have the benefit of a large tank. • Uses a Powerhead, sponge filter and the PVC to deliver a steady supply of filtered water to the fry. ….And a sponge filter and heater completes the setup! The other two items you will need to purchase are: Nylon Coffee Filter – ($6 at ACE Hardware) 8 ½ x 11” Food-Grade Container (tray) ($11 at The Container Store) • 5 – 3/8” holes need to be drilled in the tray – 2“ from the bottom • You can comfortably fit 2 coffee filters in each tray. • The trays are placed onto the frame of the tank, and airline tubing is plugged onto the plastic valves and cut to the appropriate length. The completed nursery tank in operation • • • • Remove the spawning slate from the hatching jar and check carefully to make sure there are no “Klingons.” Remove the hatching jar from the hatchery tank. Place the empty coffee filter in a 1-quart “Gladware” container. Pour some of the water from the hatching jar into the coffee filter. • • • Using a glass turkey baster, carefully suck the wigglers off the bottom of the hatching jar and squirt them into the coffee filter. Since the water will still be a dark blue, it helps to set the hatching jar on a white towel to increase visibility of the wigglers. Place the Gladware container into the water-filled tray on the frame of the tank, and allow the temperature to equalize. • • • • • When the temperature has equalized, lift the filter out of the Gladware container and set it into the tray. Open the air/water valve and start the water flowing. The water should be flowing at a rate just faster than a drip, (to break the surface tension) but not a stream. The fry will bunch together and form “clumps.” This is normal. Using a plastic pipette, remove any dead fry and un-hatched eggs. Assuming that the water in the hatchery is at 84 degrees, somewhere around day 2 (after hatching) you’ll notice that the yolk sacks are noticeably smaller, and the fry are “scooting” around the bottom of the filter. Some of them may even be strong enough to make short “sprints” off the bottom, and up into the water column. Sometime within the next 24 hours, you’ll look in the filter and will be surprised to see a whole cloud of fry swimming about in the filter. A few of them may still be scooting around the bottom of the filterr, but now it’s time to make sure you’re ready to feed the inevitable swarm of fish! The first food for the fry, we use a mixture of powdered egg yolk and powdered Spirulina. Powdered egg yolk can be purchased on-line, or from baking specialty stores (Williams & Sonoma). It costs about $11 for a one pound bag. The advantages to using powdered egg yolk are: • • • • • Finely ground – Perfect size for fry Pasteurized – No bacteria Will not spoil – No refrigeration needed No boiling/peeling eggs Extremely cost effective Preparing the Food In a separate Container – Pill Bottle: • Mix a teaspoon full of the powdered egg yolk with a very small amount of the Spirulina powder. Just enough to give it a greenish tinge. • Put a few drops of water on a spoon and add a little of the mixture to the water with a toothpick. • When mixed, it should have a thick, moist appearance, like toothpaste Preparing the Food Using small pieces of dark colored slate (1” x 1” or 1” x 2”) smear some of the paste on the lower half of the slate. • Smear it as thinly as possible. • If too thick, it will flake off when placed in the water. • Allow to dry for several hours. • Store extras in refrigerator. • Don’t be in a hurry to feed them. Wait at least 12 hours after you notice them free-swimming to feed them. Stand one of the slates upright in the coffee filter with the fry. The fry will/should immediately swarm the slate, and begin picking off the egg yolk. • • • • • • • Leave the slates in for 2-3 hours. Remove slowly. We feed three separate times (0700, 1500, & 2000). Feed only the egg yolk mixture for the first 24 hours. Use a plastic pipette ($5 per 100 on Amazon) to remove uneaten food after each feeding. Remember to change the coffee filters every other day, or as needed After Day 1, begin adding in a secondary food such as micro-worms, vinegar eels or brine shrimp. ü San Francisco Bay vs. Great Salt Lakes Brine Shrimp ü Size ü Cost By day 3, all of the fry should be large enough to eat baby brine shrimp, and you can discontinue the egg yolk mixture. Use the “belly barometer.” To ensure that the fry get off to a great start, we keep them in the coffee filters for 10 days. We use 2 ½ gallon tanks for the next stage of the grow-out process. Through much trial and error, we have found that the next few steps are critical to the survival of the fry. Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Ø Clean and prep the 2 ½ gallon tank. Use a seasoned sponge filter. Heater set to 84 degrees. Very sensitive to being moved. Fill the 2 ½ gallon tanks with water from the Nursery Tank. Lift the filter out of the tray, and set it in the newly prepared 2 ½ gallon tank. Ø Tilt the filter, and let the little guys out. 10 Day Old Fry in their New Home Wigglers – Day 3 Wigglers – Day 1 Fry – Day 6 Fry – Day 4 Fry – Day 9 Fry – Day 8