Becca
Members
I've had 2 types of Dicrossus spawn in the last week- 2 female maculatus in a 20 long were guarding eggs/fry and one female dicrossus in the 33 is guarding eggs. I pulled some freeswimming maculatus fry to a breeder box and so far, so good. The last batch got eaten after 2 weeks. I'm not sure the filamentosus will hatch because the 33 doesn't have ideal parameters, but we'll see.
The most interesting part of all of this is actually the way females change and learning what physical and behavioral indicators can tip you iff to the presence of fry or eggs.
The other interesting thing I've witnessed in both is mobile platform spawning. If they pick a leaf attached to a plant, they don't move it. If the spwning site is a detached leaf, the female will move it around and even turn it eggs down if a threat approaches.
As Jeff Michels mentioned in his talk last year, female macs have yellow ventral fins and female fils have orange. Both have clear ventral fins until either actively spawning or actively guarding eggs. Orange ventrals were what tipped me off to the filamentosus eggs this morning. They were laid sometime last night under "moon lighting."
I can't figure out how to embed videos from my phone, but here are two to compare.
Female Dicrossus maculatus and fry: http://youtu.be/XgSRk_nDxak
Dicrossus filamentosus with eggs.: http://youtu.be/B6c6pgWteYo
Sent from my SCH-I435 using MonsterAquariaNetwork App
The most interesting part of all of this is actually the way females change and learning what physical and behavioral indicators can tip you iff to the presence of fry or eggs.
The other interesting thing I've witnessed in both is mobile platform spawning. If they pick a leaf attached to a plant, they don't move it. If the spwning site is a detached leaf, the female will move it around and even turn it eggs down if a threat approaches.
As Jeff Michels mentioned in his talk last year, female macs have yellow ventral fins and female fils have orange. Both have clear ventral fins until either actively spawning or actively guarding eggs. Orange ventrals were what tipped me off to the filamentosus eggs this morning. They were laid sometime last night under "moon lighting."
I can't figure out how to embed videos from my phone, but here are two to compare.
Female Dicrossus maculatus and fry: http://youtu.be/XgSRk_nDxak
Dicrossus filamentosus with eggs.: http://youtu.be/B6c6pgWteYo
Sent from my SCH-I435 using MonsterAquariaNetwork App