Let there be fish!
Let there be fish!
:celeb1:
The fry hatched last night! At 10:30 I checked (with a flash light) and saw a bunch swimming around, so I covered everything back up and went to bed.
This morning, I found about half of the eggs did not hatch (and didn't look right). I'm guessing this was due to poor water circulation around the eggs. Or maybe a few went bad and a fungus spread without the male to tend the eggs. All in all, I'm guessing about 40-50 eggs hatched. Of those, I'd say about 10 didn't swim well and were either dead or just on the bottom.
I guess one good thing about letting the eggs hatch with the parents is that you would not even be aware of any poor swimmers. Any defective fish would simply not get transferred.
Still, that leaves about 30-40 to try and raise.
Anyway, I want to say, that when I first approached the tank, I got a little freaked out. I saw some fry last night, so I knew they were in there, but when I peeled back some of the side covering this morning, the only fish I saw was this little guy that was flailing on the bottom. I didn't know if it was too bright, or what.
I had the opal acrylic cover over the egg crate louver + the sides were blacked out. The room was lit as a result of the fuge and culture lights, but inside the tank looked pretty dark! So why was this guy looking like I was blasting the tank with light?
I turned on the overhead shop light (1 T12 lamp) to get a better look, and after looking inside the tank, decided it was too dark without the shop light. There were plenty of guys swimming in the water column apparently undisturbed by the shop light. And the shop light provided enough directional light that I could finally make out some rotifers. So I left the shop light on and left just the egg crate louver. That opal acrylic just made the lighting too omnidirectional, which made it hard to see the fry, let alone the rotifers.