Wonderful surprise!

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Emma Turner
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Wonderful surprise!

Post by Emma Turner » Sun Nov 26, 2006 4:43 pm

Having carried out quite a bit of maintenance on the River Tank earlier today, and rather disheartened that for the 2nd time in a row there were no more Sewellia fry to be found in the filter, I'm over the moon to report that I've just seen a young Sewellia fry in the main tank itself! :mrgreen: I had just been photographing one of the adults who was posing on a cobble at the front of the tank, when something caught my eye on a leaf from one of the large Anubias clumps! I'd guess that the young Sewellia was about 1.5cm TL, which is the same size as the lone fry I rescued from the 2nd batch. :D It didn't hang around for long and I haven't been able to spot it since, but it's in there somewhere. :D :D :D

Emma
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Jim Powers
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Post by Jim Powers » Sun Nov 26, 2006 5:03 pm

Great news!! Where there is one, there are probably more. :D
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Mad Duff
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Post by Mad Duff » Sun Nov 26, 2006 5:19 pm

Congratulations Emma, sounds like removing the danio's has done the trick :D
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14 loach species bred, which will be next?

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Emma Turner
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Post by Emma Turner » Sun Nov 26, 2006 5:47 pm

Mad Duff wrote:Congratulations Emma, sounds like removing the danio's has done the trick :D
Yes, to a degree I think it has. There are still two adult Schistura balteata in there which are looking rather well-fed though:

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Emma
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Graeme Robson
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Post by Graeme Robson » Sun Nov 26, 2006 6:06 pm

Excellent!! :D This all sounds promising.
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Martin Thoene
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Post by Martin Thoene » Sun Nov 26, 2006 6:08 pm

Those baltis need relocating. I bet they're worse predators than the Danios were.

Yesterday, I watched a baby cheni litterally swim right across the nose of an adult. The adult never even budged. I would suspect that Sewellia will leave babies alone too.

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Emma Turner
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Post by Emma Turner » Sun Nov 26, 2006 6:17 pm

I haven't managed to negotiate another tank yet :evil: , otherwise I would have moved the balteatas by now. I've had them so long and love them to pieces so I just couldn't get rid of them. :wink:

I have been wondering about something else though. I forgot to mention at the time of finding that lone fry from the 2nd batch in the filter, I found a dead female Sewellia lineolata in the tank. No obvious signs of what might have happened, and everything else was fine and has been fine since. I have to wonder whether I lost my main breeding female as she was quite a nice size and there haven't been any large broods in the filter since then. Most of my other females are quite a bit smaller so I'm unsure as to whether they are sexually mature yet.

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mikev
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Post by mikev » Sun Nov 26, 2006 7:03 pm

Sorry to hear this :cry:

There is another possibility: as I recall, your spawns occurred during the heat waves. Maybe this is the required component (cf. recent posts from Germany).

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Emma Turner
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Post by Emma Turner » Tue Nov 28, 2006 3:35 pm

Earlier on this evening I managed to capture a few pics of the aforementioned little Sewellia lineolata that has been lucky enough to avoid the attentions of the Schistura balteata in the main River Tank. :D He/she was out and about grazing on an Anubias leaf at the front left hand side of the tank. Pics aren't brilliant, but show he/she is doing great 8) :

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helen nightingale
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Post by helen nightingale » Tue Nov 28, 2006 3:38 pm

congratulations Emma.

Good luck with the tank negotiations. maybe if you go on about it for long enough, Steve will end up saying "yes dear" so as you shut up?

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Graeme Robson
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Post by Graeme Robson » Tue Nov 28, 2006 3:57 pm

Superb! :D Great to see the little chap doing so well.
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