Joe Lydon
New member
Hello, Everyone! I'm new to the forum, but I've been lurking for a few weeks. I have received some very insightful information for the 40b reef build I'm doing for my daughter.
With that aside, I was wondering about atmospheric pressure and it's relation to the success of breeding marine fish. Considering the majority of reef action is at a depth greater than 10 meters, do you think our lack of depth is hindering our ability to reproduce with marine species? The thing that brought this to mind is my experience with breeding boa constrictor imperator. Although you can acheive some success year round, it is hit or miss. Courtship normally occurs once the barometric pressure drops. The significance in pressure change at these depths is such an environmentally different experience, that IMO, could very well be the reason for our success rate.
For years, I have wondered why nobody has really gotten the breeding thing nailed down. With the technology available today, it doesn't make sense. It would be so beneficial for our oceans and keepers (as captive bred normally thrive more often than wild caught), not to mention it would be quite profitable. It seems all of the motive is there, yet no results. Something is missing, they are animals and their single most important goal in life is to reproduce.
Any thoughts?:fish2:
With that aside, I was wondering about atmospheric pressure and it's relation to the success of breeding marine fish. Considering the majority of reef action is at a depth greater than 10 meters, do you think our lack of depth is hindering our ability to reproduce with marine species? The thing that brought this to mind is my experience with breeding boa constrictor imperator. Although you can acheive some success year round, it is hit or miss. Courtship normally occurs once the barometric pressure drops. The significance in pressure change at these depths is such an environmentally different experience, that IMO, could very well be the reason for our success rate.
For years, I have wondered why nobody has really gotten the breeding thing nailed down. With the technology available today, it doesn't make sense. It would be so beneficial for our oceans and keepers (as captive bred normally thrive more often than wild caught), not to mention it would be quite profitable. It seems all of the motive is there, yet no results. Something is missing, they are animals and their single most important goal in life is to reproduce.
Any thoughts?:fish2:
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