Welcome to GuppyLog.com
New to Guppylog?
Immediate Help


Conversions and Calculator
Conversions and Tank volume calculator


Add yourself to our guppylog map
Guppylog Members


* Change as much water as often as you can! *
Inkmaker
Front Page · Everything · News · Ask Guppylog · Diaries
Display: Sort:
No news, good news? | 5 comments (5 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Re: Your guppy's situation seems particularly (none / 0) (#2)
by marijke on Wed Oct 27, 2004 at 01:53:41 AM PST

Thanks for thinking with us! ;)

It is very good possible the shop sells Asian guppies. It is quite common (so I've been told) to sell them.
My DH is visiting the pet shop at this very moment (for catfood) and he'll take a good look at the tank there. Yesterday I've noticed no less than 4 dead guppies there so I have decided to buy no more guppies there (the schooltank will deliver it! But not until the situation in our own tank is stable).

About using sodium chloride: I didn't do that, but I've heard: don't use kitchen salt but sea salt.

The 2 females are still alive, very quiet (are females always more quiet than male?), but alive. I've forgotten to ask my DH to buy some brine shrimp too, I'll do that this afternoon. It's good for the water and it's an easy way to find out if the fishes are eating well.

Again, thanks for the thinking!
Greetings, Marijke (The Netherlands)
[ Parent ]



Oh! About brine shrimp! (none / 0) (#3)
by unclescott on Wed Oct 27, 2004 at 09:14:06 AM PST

One of the attractions of using live or frozen brine shrimp is that being marine - actually hyper-saline - creatures, they are very unlikely to carry freshwater diseases. That is why some foods grown in fresh water are especially useful with marine fish too.

However, I'd bet dinner at a good restaurant (at least a couple steps up from - choke - McDonalds) that dead brine shrimp could cause an excellent environment for velvet (Oodinium or Piscinoodinium species) to bloom. Then we have adult fish covered with a sheen of tiny dots. Fry immediately have clamped tails and then go away. So please don't let uneaten b.s. accumulate in a tank and decay.

That is also why I carry on about having small pond snails in a fry tank and, as a matter of fact in my livebearers tanks. I even leave snails in killie tanks, although in the tanks with de-mineralized water the snails don't fair too well.

Brine shrimp do have carotenes which help with the fish's colors. Their shells can act as a laxative. However when one considers the meat to weight ratio, other foods may have more nutrition per unit. If you have a good brine shrimp supply, just feed a little more shrimp.

Bran shrimp should clear the fish out pretty quickly too. ;)

Lightly salted tanks are useful with fry, not only because the salt seems to offer a little protection against velvet, but helps the freshly hatched baby brine shrimp, bbs, to live a couple of hours longer than they would in a freshwater aquarium.

Do you have access to live brine shrimp in the Netherlands? Are brine shrimp eggs as incredibly expensive there as they are in the US?

If you - or I -really want to research brine shrimp, a Google search revealed a lot of places around the world doing research on them. Among a lot of others, there is a US research center
http://www.snarc.ars.usda.gov/Research/ludwig.htm

and the most famous one at Ghent:
http://allserv.ugent.be/aquaculture/general/general2.htm

"Again, thanks for the thinking!" Well.... I try every now and again. ;)

All the best!
Scott Davis

[ Parent ]



English is hard sometimes :S (none / 0) (#4)
by marijke on Wed Oct 27, 2004 at 05:43:24 PM PST

Oops, I think there is a misunderstanding about my Dutch translation for "brine shrimps"...! My fault...

With brine shrimps I meant (just raced through google to find out) "daphnia", not "artemia"...
Those words we didn't learn at school...

To avoid more misunderstandings from me: what's the english word for Daphnia's, those small transparant red things we use to feed fish?

I gave them daphnia, not artemia...
Greetings, Marijke (The Netherlands)
[ Parent ]



Re: English is hard sometimes :S (none / 0) (#5)
by PeterW on Fri Oct 29, 2004 at 09:28:53 AM PST

Daphnia is the same everywhere.

[ Parent ]


No news, good news? | 5 comments (5 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Display: Sort:

Menu

· create account

· F.A.Q. For Newbies!

· Immediate Help For Newbies!

· search


Web www.guppylog.com

· Scoop Info

· Our Tanks

Login
Make a new account
Username:
Password:

SourceForge Logo Powered by Scoop
Subscribe to our news feed
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies. Comments are owned by the Poster. The Rest © 2002 and beyond The Management

create account | faq | search