I have it in me to try to breed these things..dunno why, they don't sell for much, but I just want to.
So I am going to just use this thread to keep notes. I keep notes locally, but sometimes it is helpful to put things in a different format, and actually have to explain something to someone with a question...brainstorming is a great way to progress in anything.
So...the story goes at this point, I have had an itch to do these, I stumbled on a mated pair at LFS about 6 months ago. I conditioned and have held about 6 batches.
I feed the same mix I feed to all of my fish, Rods, mysis, spirulina brine and a food made locally. Selcon added to food about once a week. This combo has worked well on my bangaiis, and my rubies (who I have not been able to rear the fry for yet either).
I generally try to stimulate a breeding response in my bangaii with fish eggs added, and it usually works well. In the pajamas it does not seem to have an effect, they just keep pushing out eggs. I generally am able to give my male Bangaiis a break by not providing the eggs, as soon as I put eggs in the tank, I get a batch in a few days. So it has been effective at allowing me to affect their cycle.
So I will do my best to track info that might relate to my attempts.
Starter info: One pair of Sphaeramia nematoptera in a dedicated breeding system.
My breeding system and fry rearing tank are linked together, but I can detach a single tank from the system if needed. Setup is listed here http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2026834(I will be updating more on it as I have time).
The tank size they reside in is 16g tank, and they do well in there. The reside between two bangaii's pairs in adjacent tanks and do not seem to have an aggression issues without a visual seperator.
After conditioning the parents, the father seems to be a pro at holding eggs.
The mother produce eggs roughly 2-3 weeks apart, and the father seems to hold for roughly 11 days. I will list out my logs here on out.
I generally only test for ph and salinity in this system. I have attempted rearing the fry only once with little success.
So I am going to just use this thread to keep notes. I keep notes locally, but sometimes it is helpful to put things in a different format, and actually have to explain something to someone with a question...brainstorming is a great way to progress in anything.
So...the story goes at this point, I have had an itch to do these, I stumbled on a mated pair at LFS about 6 months ago. I conditioned and have held about 6 batches.
I feed the same mix I feed to all of my fish, Rods, mysis, spirulina brine and a food made locally. Selcon added to food about once a week. This combo has worked well on my bangaiis, and my rubies (who I have not been able to rear the fry for yet either).
I generally try to stimulate a breeding response in my bangaii with fish eggs added, and it usually works well. In the pajamas it does not seem to have an effect, they just keep pushing out eggs. I generally am able to give my male Bangaiis a break by not providing the eggs, as soon as I put eggs in the tank, I get a batch in a few days. So it has been effective at allowing me to affect their cycle.
So I will do my best to track info that might relate to my attempts.
Starter info: One pair of Sphaeramia nematoptera in a dedicated breeding system.
My breeding system and fry rearing tank are linked together, but I can detach a single tank from the system if needed. Setup is listed here http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2026834(I will be updating more on it as I have time).
The tank size they reside in is 16g tank, and they do well in there. The reside between two bangaii's pairs in adjacent tanks and do not seem to have an aggression issues without a visual seperator.
After conditioning the parents, the father seems to be a pro at holding eggs.
The mother produce eggs roughly 2-3 weeks apart, and the father seems to hold for roughly 11 days. I will list out my logs here on out.
I generally only test for ph and salinity in this system. I have attempted rearing the fry only once with little success.
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