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Where does everyone keep their Fry?

Care Tips
By Tvad123, Section Ask Guppylog
Posted on Wed Aug 29, 2007 at 12:24:17 PM PST
Tags: (all tags)
I have 10 guppies and everytime a female has fry I catch them in a net and move them to a 10 gallon tank with a heater. Currently I have 20+ fry in this 10 gallon tank but it is looking very dirty. The oldest fry are only a month old. Does anyone have any suggestions for a small filter that will not disturb the water too much for my fish?



How does everyone else clean a tank with fry in it? If anyone has any ideas it would be a great help. What would be even better though is if someone wants to describe their fry raising method(s). This information could be extremely valuable to my fish and I.
Thanks, Tvad
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Where does everyone keep their Fry? | 9 comments (9 topical, editorial, 0 hidden)
Re: Where does everyone keep their Fry? (none / 0) (#9)
by Honey333 on Sat Mar 20, 2004 at 05:33:04 PM PST

Have u ever thought of using a filter???



THERE'S A METHOD? (none / 0) (#7)
by Angelee on Fri Dec 05, 2003 at 04:57:28 PM PST

Let's see I have a ten gallon for the fry (very quickly becoming overrun).  Note to self:  ask Santa for yet another tank or give some fry away before it's too late!  I turn on the light at 6 am and feed them baby bites at around 7:30 (gives them time to rise and shine).  Off to work and school, leaving on light.  In between shifts run home feed again (this time bbs or crushed flake).  Out again.  Back home watch them to make sure they are all doing swimmingly (flashlight to check color and anything suspicious).  At around 6 or 7 p.m. feed them crushed spirulina or a wafer that they can pick at until bedtime. Lights out   Every week check stats and clean out gravel (CARRREEEEFUUULLYY), partial water change and slow trickles into the tank. Keeping in mind changes if anything is suspicious or a disaster happens.  There you have it!  I don't know if it's a method or a madness though!  
"The Rocky Mountain Gupster" ANGELEE


mini penguin (none / 0) (#5)
by red illuzion on Fri Dec 05, 2003 at 04:07:01 PM PST

thats what i use for my fry 10gal tank. since it comes with a bio wheel. and how do i raise my fry. well i feed them once in the morning, when i get home at 3pm, then every couple hours after that till 9pm, i turn on the lights in the morning for about 30mins to feed them, then my wife turns them off when she goes to work. i turn them back on when i get home and stay on till night time. and sometimes i turn on the air tuby so they get some exercise in there. i feed them first bites and "no bbs" fry food from mike's. and they get frozen beef heart, brine shrimp, bloodworms, crushed flake food, and egg yolk. and when i get a chance they will be getting some spirulina into their diet.



Hey everyone (none / 0) (#4)
by cloe on Fri Dec 05, 2003 at 01:39:13 PM PST

I have two 10 gallon and a 5 gallon for my fry (startng to be slightly overrun) Since space is limited I do, yes, co-mingle approximate aged fry with opposite enough colors that I can then seperate (ie. red fry with purple fry, yellows/blacks with blue metals)I use the sponge filters and love them since they double as the air stone and filtration. Somtimes algae will build up or food gets stuck on the filter and the little fry eat off of it.
As for fry raising methods, ummm do I have a method? Worry, water change, feed, worry, water change, feed...I try to feed spurlina powder 3 times day and frozen baby brine shrimp 1 time a day (or atlease every other day depending on supply) and I do small water changes 2-3 times a week. I keep the temp at about 80 degrees and keep the heater near the filter since the air wpushes the heated water around instead of having it sit in one spot. My lights stay on as long as I am awake (6am to about 10pm) then lights off for everyone. I have also finally come to grasps with getting rid of sick looking fry, though I do still wait until it looks like a lost cause.
I hope this helps and good luck to you both! Cloe



tank....fry....stuff (none / 0) (#3)
by Aerelynn on Fri Dec 05, 2003 at 08:17:02 AM PST

I'm pretty new to the whole breeding/fry aspect of fish myself.  Currently I have a 10g with all my adults, and a 7g that is now for the fry.  Both tanks have power filters.  The fry tank has a Millinium 1000 filter on it, and I absolutley love it for the fry tank as it has a switch type thing to control the power of the flow.  I set it to basically off *veeeery slow* during the night so they can rest, and any time it's feeding time so they don't have to run after their food as much,and during the day, I turn it up to about halfway so that they can get some exercise, and pulls some of the poo off the gravel.  I have 14 fry in there right now, and have had some in there for a couple of weeks, no losses to report I'm happy to say.  The fry pretty much seem to know to stay away from it. But I'm pretty sure it's due to the fact that it's not set on full blast.

As for cleaning the tank, I have a glass divider that I put in the tank.  I herd them over to one side and just clean the gravel one side at a time. This seems to work pretty well for them, and doesn't seem to stress them out much at all.

Hope this helps!

Aerelynn




Wow!!!! (none / 0) (#8)
by guppygirl on Sat Dec 06, 2003 at 12:00:40 PM PST

I was just catching up on my Guppylog reading and saw this post.

I am extremely impressed with all the "methodologies" that you are all using.
My fry are sure jealous now!!!!

I know that some of you are rather new to this site, but, way to go helping Tvad!!!!

I think that's what makes this site so different from any others out there.

Keep up the great work for your fishies, and Guppylog!!!!!

I just wanted you all to know that.

gg
:-)

[ Parent ]



I take it you do not (none / 0) (#1)
by GuppyAdict on Fri Dec 05, 2003 at 05:54:10 AM PST

currently have a filter in your fry tank, right?  You can use pretty much any filter that is compatible with your 10 gallon.  If your worried about your fry getting sucked up into the filter, just put a pair of pantyhose over the intake tube.  Well, that's what I use anyways.  They also sell similar products in your LFS for fry tanks.  



Speaking of filters, in perhaps inexpensive 10 gal (none / 0) (#2)
by unclescott on Fri Dec 05, 2003 at 06:42:47 AM PST

tanks, a basic and safe filter would be one of the sponge filters. The less expensive ones which sit on the bottom of the tank have been criticized for fatally catching fry and fish under them. I have never seen that - I wonder if dead fish are just drawn under the filter.  The tubes going into them can be altered size wise to fit small tanks. Using a cheap pipe cutter, replacement tubes can be cut from standard 1/2" tubing bought at shops. These filters can be fit into pretty small tanks. They also can be purchased in several sizes.

More expensive and more efficient are the hydrosponges such as Ken's sells. (Click on the link and then on the photo.) It looks like one can fit a powerhead on them too. I know I did that with one of the stand-up sponge filters in the past.

Tetra used to (and may still) sell a series of sponge filters (Tetra-Billi?) which hung from the side of the tank. They are probably the most expensive, but if one rigs a 2" metal can on a drill, they can punch out replacement sponges cheaper than the replacements for the above.

All of those sponges clean easily. All are great biological filters and pretty easily started. They don't suck fry into them. :) Also, they are good surfaces for microfoods such as rotifers to grow on. You will see fry picking on sponge filters and also on plants. In both cases they are grazing for rotifers and the like between regular feeding. That grazing is perfectly natural and will suppliment their diets.

You may not ever expand the numbers of your aquariums. However it is not a bad idea to plan on buying the same sponge filters so that you have interchangable parts - just in case. ;)

Two in a crowded tank may be a tad unsightly, but is also a realistic way to cope with a large population. Also, you can rinse one filter one time and the other the next time when cleaning the tank.

Sponge filters usually cost more than a plastic box filter (recently got a terrific deal on about 40 of these filters though), but, even with a pump to provide air, they are cheaper and safer than either power or cannister filters. You can run several tanks off of one air source. While whatever is providing the air for a system of several tanks can be a pretty expensive pump or blower, it is usually less expensive to purchase and run than having a power filter on each of several tanks. Sponge filters match up well in such a system. Knew a guy who ran over 120 modestly sized tanks (mostly with sponge filters) and one linear (?) blower.

All the best,
frugal aquarist

[ Parent ]



sponge (none / 0) (#6)
by parttimer on Fri Dec 05, 2003 at 04:42:33 PM PST

the way to go for fry. click on kens (on front page on left) he sells sponge filters and food at great prices.

[ Parent ]


Where does everyone keep their Fry? | 9 comments (9 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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