Fish Breeding
Disclaimer: This document is intended to familiarize the reader with
different methods that fish use to breed and introduce terminology.
Anyone who wants to breed a given species of fish should check specific
internet resources
or books to find out about
the particular species that they want to raise.
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such it belongs to the readers of rec.aquaria and alt.aquaria.
Articles with attributions are copyrighted by their original authors.
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Contents:
``How do fish make babies...and can I watch?''
Fish breed in many ways, and yes you can watch.
In fact, watching fish breed is
one of the great fascinations in the hobby because there are so many
interesting breeding strageties among fish.
There are two main strategies that fish use: egglaying and
livebearing.
Livebearing fish do what the name suggests. The female gives
birth to fully formed, free-swimming young. The female fish is
internally fertilized by the male fish, and carries the fry for about
a month before delivering them. Upon delivery, the babies swim off,
hide, and begin searching for food.
Livebearers include the popular mollies, platies, swordtails, and
guppies. Other livebearers are halfbeaks, anableps, and fish in the
Goodeid family. They are easy to sex, as the female is larger, and
the male has a rod-like anal fin called a gonopodium that he uses to
internally fertilize the female. After fertilization, the female can
produce multiple batches of babies without a male present.
Egglaying is also what the name suggests: the fish lay eggs instead
of giving birth to little fish. As the fish grow, they hatch into fry
with an attached yolk sac, and then mature into fish. The process
usually takes around a week to 10 days, although it can vary
widely.
Egglayers have many methods of laying their eggs
Egg scatters usually scatter eggs around weeds, or onto gravel. The male
chases the female during spawning, and the eggs are fertilized as they
fall. Spawning runs can be spectacular to watch since the fish race around
the tank and ignore anything else, including food. Examples of egg
scatterers are tetras, barbs, rasboras, and danios.
Substrate spawners are a little choosier about where they put the eggs.
They lay eggs that attatch to some sort of substrate. Plants, rocks,
wood, and even the aquarium glass may be chosen as a spawning site. Both
fish participate in the egg laying, with the male fertilizing the eggs as
the female lays them. Examples of substrate spawners are many catfish,
some cichlids, and killifish.
Bubblenest builders lay their eggs in a nest of bubbles blown by the male
fish. The bubbles are held together with saliva and look like foam. They
tend to attract infusoria that the babies can eat, and keep the eggs at
the surface of the water, where they are well-oxygenated. The eggs are
laid a few at a time, and carefully placed in the nest where they hatch.
Examples of bubblenest builders are bettas and gouramis.
Mouthbrooders actually keep their eggs in their mouths until the eggs
hatch. The eggs are again laid a few at a time, and once the male
fertilizes them, the parent doing the mouthbrooding gathers them up in
his/her mouth. That parent eats sparingly, if at all, until the baby fish
are released. Examples of mouthbrooders are male arrowanas and female
cichlids.
Marine fish also lay eggs. Some are substrate spawners, but many lay
pelagic eggs that float in the plankton. There the eggs hatch into a
larval stage, and the larvae float freely and eat tiny plankton until they
grow into fish. See the Moe reference for a more complete description.
``Help! Why have my angelfish (or kribs or African cichlids)
started killing everything in my tank?''
``Why did my female platy just turn around and eat her babies?''
``I think my tetras spawned. Where are the eggs?''
Parental care in the fish world varies widely. Parents can be
anywhere on a continuum from eating all their eggs or fry, to both parents
fiercely guarding their eggs and fry.
Many fish parents show some common behaviors, so I will discuss them
here.
Most fish consider any and all fish eggs and young to be a tasty treat.
Therefore most fish will not hesitate to snack on any they find, including
their own. This means that egg scatters and many substrate spawners
really cannot be bred in a community tank, as the eggs will quickly be
eaten by the parents and other fish. Marine fish and invertebrates also
eat eggs. Livebearers are especially notorious for eating their young.
A few fish ignore their eggs or fry, and so can be bred in a species
tank. White cloud minnows can breed this way, and many killifish will at
least ignore the eggs. Baby killies are fair game, though. Guppies will
also often ignore babies.
Other fish have one parent that guards the eggs and fry. Most bubblenest
builders and mouthbrooders operate this way, as do some substrate
spawners. The responsible male or female stays with the eggs and young,
until they are free swimming. With bubblenest builders, the male tends
the nest, blows bubbles as they pop, and keeps any falling eggs or fry in
it. He will also defend the nest against other fish. Mouthbrooders
simply hide their eggs in their mouths, and some substrate spawning
catfish will hide the eggs underneath them. Certain substrate spawning
cichlids also have one parent care for the eggs and fry.
A more common setup among cichlids is to have both fish guard and care for
the young. This setup can be really fascinating to watch. The parents
will take turns fanning or blowing fresh water onto the eggs, and removing
any fungused eggs. They will also fiercely defend the spawning site,
which can often cause injury or even death to other tankmates. Once the
eggs have hatched, the parents will also guard the fry. Some fish will
even move the fry to a different place each day. Once the babies are free
swimming, some fish continue to guard them, while others end their
parental duties. Many African cichlids guard their babies until they
spawn again. Discus even feed their babies off of their slimecoats.
A more extreme version of guarding is practiced by some Tanganyikan
cichlids. There, older siblings will stay around the nest and help the
parents defend subsequent spawns. The babies are allowed to stay until
breeding age, when they are driven off.
``My fish just laid eggs. How do I keep the eggs or babies from being
eaten?''
The most common way to keep eggs from being eaten
is to use a separate breeding tank. There
the parents can spawn or give birth to their young, and be removed once
they are done. Egg scatterers can be placed over a piece of netting, a
grate, or a bed of marbles to protect the eggs as the fish spawn.
Bubblenest breeders and mouthbrooders can be left in the tank until they
stop caring for the young. Livebearers can be allowed to give birth in a
dense thicket of plants or plastic spawning grass, so the babies can hide
until the mother is done giving birth and is removed.
A breeding tank also is good because it can be kept clean. Eggs and fry
need very clean water to hatch and grow. There are also no adults around
to compete with the babies for food. Many breeders use a bare tank with
only a sponge filter as filtration. Debris and extra food are easily seen
and siphoned off daily. Frequent water changes can be done on the tank,
as there are no other fish around to stress.
Another solution is to allow fish to breed on yarn mops, a plant, or a
piece of slate or glass in the community tank. The eggs can then be moved
to the breeding tank to grow. This works well for angelfish, catfish, and
Australian rainbowfish. Killifish eggs can be collected from peat or yarn
mops and set in a separate container or dried to incubate. Livebearers
can be bred in a commercial breeding trap or breeding net within a
community tank. The trap separates the babies from the mothers and then
gives the babies a safe place to grow.
Some cichlids protect their babies well enough to just be left in a
community setup, although this can stress the other fish in the tank. In
fact, there are species of cichlids that will turn on each other if there
are no other fish in the breeding tank for them to threaten.
``I have fish in a breeding setup, but they just won't breed.''
``Why do my fishes' eggs keep fungusing and the fry dying?''
Many fish will not breed successfully without specific requirements.
These include:
- A mix of male and female fish.
- I know this sounds obvious, but some
fish are not easy to sex. In species that are difficult to sex, is best
to start out with at least six young fish so that you are certain of
getting both males and females. Starting with many fish also gives
monogamous fish a chance to pick compatible mates. Sometimes if a single
male and female are introduced, they will not breed. Other fish, like
livebearers, killifish, and polygamous cichlids need more females that
males so that females are not harassed by amorous males.
- Extremely clean water.
- Most fish will not breed if there is any
ammonia or nitrite present, and large amounts of nitrate are toxic to baby
fish. Some fish, especially tetras, must be bred in a breeding tank that
is bare and sterile so that their eggs do not fungus. For more
information about clean water, see the beginner FAQ.
- A varied diet.
- Fish that are producing eggs need better food that
fish that are just living in a community. Breeders call the process of
specially feeding parents conditioning. Conditioning foods include live
foods, fresh frozen foods, or spirulina based foods. Find out the
specific requirements of the fish you intend to breed. If you need
information about live foods, see the live food FAQ.
- The correct environment.
- Fish that breed on substrates need proper
substrates to breed on, like peat, rocks, shells, or plants. Some fish
are shy and require a lot of cover, caves, or dim light. There are also
fish that require a particular water chemistry to breed. Examples are
discus, which require very soft, acid water or African cichlids which
require very hard, alkaline water.
- External cues.
- Many tropical fish breed in the rainy season. When it
rains, streams flood, the water hardness drops, and there is thunder and
lightning. Adventuresome breeders with rainy season fish may try large
water changes with distilled water, watering cans to simulate rain, strong
currents, and even flashing lights and loud noises. Temperature changes
may also stimulate spawning, as may changes in the light/dark cycle.
``My fish bred, but I cannot raise the fry to adulthood.''
Rearing fish can take some work. Baby fish require clean water, and
some require special foods.
Baby livebearers are usually the easiest to raise. Some will take finely
crushed flake foods from the start, and only require frequent water
changes to keep up with their growth. They also need algae or spirulina.
Baby egglayers are often more difficult to raise. Most are too small to
eat adult fish foods, and so require special foods. Live baby brine
shrimp are the food of choice for most baby fish, although some require
even smaller infusoria. Sifted daphnia also work. Baby algae eating
catfish require algae or blanched vegetables. There are also commercial
fry foods that work or, in desperate situations, cooked egg yolk. Be
careful, though, because non-living foods pollute the tank water terribly
-- especially egg yolk.
Actually, keeping the tank water clean is probably the biggest challenge
in raising fish. The growing fish require lots of food, and they are not
very good at finding it which means even more must be added to the tank.
As in any fishtank, adding lots of food must be balanced with keeping the
water quality extremely high. In fact, fry require cleaner water than
adult fish. Frequent water changes are a must, as is efficient biological
filtration. Baby tanks often require daily water changes of up to half
the tank. Sponge filters are the preferred method of filtration because
they are great biological filters but cannot suck up baby fish.
Marine fish larvae have the strictest requirements of all. They must be
fed extremely small plankton or rotifers in a tank with near-perfect
water. For more discussion of marine fish rearing, see Moe.
Finally, as the baby fish grow, they must be transferred to larger
quarters. Clearly the 10 gallon tank that housed 100 fry cannot house
those 100 fish for long. Betta breeders have even more work on their
hands, since the little male bettas will fight and have to be put into
separate jars or a partitioned tank.
``I have a ton of baby fish. What do I do with them?''
``Can I make any money breeding fish?''
Finding homes for baby fish can be almost as much of a challenge as
breeding them. Young fish can be given away, auctioned at aquarium
society auctions, traded for other species, or sold. Pet stores will
sometimes take African cichlids, guppies, and bettas, but many only give
store credit rather than cash.
As for turning breeding into a commercial venture, remember the laws of
supply and demand. For most common community fish, pet stores can order
whatever they want whenever they want it from importers, fish farms, and
wholesalers. The hobbyist, on the other hand, has occasional batches of
fish that the store may not need or want at that time. The only thing on
your side when you walk into a store with a batch of unrequested fish is
that locally bred fish are often healthier and less stressed that fish
that have been shipped and must be acclimated to local water conditions.
If you insist on breeding saleable fish, try rare catfish, rare rainbows,
African cichlids, show quality fancy guppies, or marine fish. Those are
all difficult for stores to obtain. To make money selling more common
fish like angels, barbs, tetras, cory cats or livebearers (other than
guppies), you need many breeding tanks and breeding pairs of fish to
assure a constant supply. You must also have fish of consistent quality.
Personally, I would recommend that you breed fish for the sheer pleasure
of it, rather than turning your fun hobby into a business venture. There
is nothing like seeing a pair of ciclids court, disappear into a cave, and
emerge in a few days with a swarm of babies.
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