Hey sport, so what exactly are you going to do with all the the clowns you are growing out?
Have you decided yet?
Hi So for you are the fry swiming around? Like I said mine were just staring at the sides then died off
when you say your rotifers are thick how can you tell?
The mom just laid more eggs tonight and I need to do something differnent to get them to survive.
Thanks for your thread Roger. Please don't stop posting as new people find this thread through it being bumped up. I'm Subscribing and Hopefully posting a thread of my own soon. My Snow Onyx Clowns have laid eggs 4 times but they keep eating them after just a few hours. I had some bigger fish in there that have now been removed to cut down on the stress. We shall see.
Not to hijack, but-
If you're fry are not swimming, could be related to their parents' diet, or could be you're not tinting your water dark enough; the fry are being "light shocked".
To check rotifer density, I use one of those glass test tubes that come in the API test kits, scoop out some water, maybe about a 1 mL, to check how many there are.
Also, air flow is a MUST, not enough oxygen in the water, the fry will suffocate.
I think that they are really too young to be spawning. They are only about a year or so old. I feed all my fish a big variety of some of the best foods around. Everything frozen is usually Selcon enriched with hypodermic needles if it can be. The live foods vary from live baby feeder fish, live shrimp, live amphipods, live baby and adult brine shrimp, caviar, clams, oysters, mysids, zoo plankton, some flake, phytos, ... I mean I feed everything and multiple times a day. I live 5 minutes from the Gulf of Mexico, so that helps. I notice they always seem to spawn after I feed clams for some reason. The first spawn was only 18 eggs, but has almost doubled with the next spawns. I also have to get the 3rd onyx clown out of there as he might be the real one causing them to eat the brewed. Thanks again for all the hard work.
Just got finished reading the entire post. I really want my clownfish to breed now! So, do you have better success with laying eggs if the clowns have an anemone in their tank?
Hey Roger! Long time no talk.
Somebody mentioned tinting the water green vs. light shock. Over the past year I have experimented with just about every scenario possible. My fry survival SKYROCKETED when I stopped dosing phyto to the fry tank and added rotifers as needed. All the light the fry tank gets in the first 7-10 days is ambient light from other tanks.
I no longer tint the water in hopes of the rots breeding in the fry tank and I have went from about 30% survival rate to over 90%. When the rots thin out, I add more, but never have to more than twice per day (usually only in the morning).
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I just read this entire thread, and I wanted to THANK YOU for taking time to keep us informed on your progress. I have had clowns spawn for years and never even tried to raise the fry.... until now.....Thank you again for your journalism....
Now, I have a couple of questions if I may......
What temperature are you keeping the fry tank?
I think I understand the concept of the rots... however, you mention keep a dense consecration of rots in the fry tank.... Are you adding Phyto to the fry tank and the rots bucket?
Oh, have you ever used a sponge filter in the fry tank?
Thank you!
YES, you have been very helpful... thank you again....
If I may ask just one more questions :lol:
How many days ahead of the fry hatching did you start making your rots?
I have a starter kit of rots from Reed coming in on Wednesday and this clutch will hatch on Thursday or Friday....
Got your PM! THANKS AGAIN!