spawning tricinctus!

Ron Popeil

Love them clownfish.
this was a surprising find yesterday morning. i have had a tile in this system for over a year, and have never seen any cleaning anywhere. the female never even appeared to be swollen with eggs. i think i will let a few nests get established and then move the tile in hopes they will switch nest sites. i would love to start rearing this species if i can.

side note, the male arrived as a solid black specimen which turned yellow in only a matter of weeks.





 
I can not find the like button... OOPS... I guess I spend a lot of time on facebook.

Do you have the rotifers all setup and ready to start these young fry off correctly?
 
they certainly never leave the anemone. there are times when the tank looks filled with only an anemone....i think a mass of little juvenile tricinctus would probably do just fine in here....
 
Maybe the male was originally collected out of a mertens which could have been why he was black and then lost it due to being in a crispa now:)
Btw, I also have a solid purple crispa that I got from Phender, and is doing great and I believe he had it for 7+ years before I got it. Anyways, the tentacles on mine are quite long 5"+ but no where near the length of yours. Any idea why yours look like they do in the wild (superr long) and mine dont? lol all of my parameters are spot on. TIA
Congrats on them laying btw! not too often you see spawning A. tricinctus:)
 
i suspect you are correct about the little male being collected from a carpet anemone, and while i expected his colors to fade quickly, i had hoped he would remain solid black. he has enormous pectoral fins, which i sort of fancy so i hope those at least get passed on to the offspring.

i have had this crispa since 2005 i believe and it has essentially always looked like this. it initially had pretty stubby tentacles for a short time, but now is the behemoth you see today with feedings of shrimp. its always been under either a 400 or 250w halide, until the last few months its now under two Sols.

here it is the day i got it with the pair of chrysopterus it was allegedly collected with.

 
I miss those days when they would collect the anemone and the fish together.

On a side note, has anyone ever seen a photo of tricinctus with a crispa in the wild? I know it's listed as a natural host, but I've never seen a photo or video of this association in the wild.
 
this pair has since laid on a removable tile. with the next few nests i will begin rearing the fry and crossing some fingers....
 
so today i am looking for rotifers and phytoplankton starts. i reread a bunch of old threads and started reading some new ones on recent clownfish rearing methods. lots of stuff to catch up on.

im going to pick up a few of these for the fry tanks.


next up, i need to start some cultures of phyto. do most people still rear their own, or just buy some dense bottled versions? a local breeder swears by the bottled stuff he buys.

if anyone would like to post pictures of their breeding set up, id love to see it!

thanks everyone!
 
here is the nest i am hoping to hatch out this week.



i have their grow out tank all ready to go: dark. ammonia alert. sponge filter. heater.



two buckets of rotifers cooking.



here is my phyto set up. i will have two bottles of nannochloropsis, tetraselmis and isocrysis.

 
so the first nest i tried out did not do well because i was struggling with my rotifer cultures. about 20 fry lasted about a week, mostly due to my inability to maintain any sort of rotifer density. over the next few weeks i nailed down the issues. today while changing the water i was shocked to see that my density seemed to have exploded. this is good since i have a hatch coming up on sunday evening. i also added some copepods from a fellow breeder and they seem to be reproducing rapidly and doing well coexisting with the rotifers.

i have two colonies going, each in 5 gallon buckets. salinity is at 1.019-1.020. one is heated to 80 degrees, the other maintains around 75 degrees.



i do a quick squirt of prime into each bucket every morning and feed 1 mL twice a day. copepods are all attached to the heater. and the haze is the mass of rotifers. i have been using RGcomplete for over a week now. the water stays clear and not murky, ammonia doesnt rise and my populations of rotifers and copepods seem to be doing quite well. i am pleased.

the phyto i had been growing is a different story however.

none of my colonies lasted long after their first split. the iso was the first to fail. it grew well for several days, i leave for an over night camping trip and come back and both bottles are now hazy white. my tetraselmis was doing very well. i split it after 10 days and three days later they both went white. my nanno lasted the longest, but then failed as well. initially i had my grow lights on 24/7. i have since switched to a 16/8 schedule.

i will have some new samples of tetra and iso arriving next week. i have a new bottle of dense nanno i plan on trying to maintain and grow out. my plan is to use the phyto i grow as a supplement to my RGcomplete.

i was also told that i should feed some selcon to my rotifers 8 hours before feeding them to fry. has anyone tried this?

any additional suggestions? particularly with the phyto side of this?
 
minh, i think frozen phyto was where i went wrong initially. i purchased some frozen phyto from a fellow reefer, who had originally received it in bulk from reeds mariculture.

when i thawed this out and used it, my rotifer water would always be a yellow green. instead of the water turning clear as they consumed the phyto, it would turn a hazy white. i would battle high ammonia and very low rotifer density. even when i sieved the rotifers they were white, instead of a nice rich brown.
 
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