There be fish!
After only a 3 week fishless cycle period, yesterday's water tests came up pH 7.4, 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, about 10ppm nitrate and 125 GH. I did a little water change to push down the nitrates just a wee bit and I was ready to go.
I spent the afternoon at my sister's place, where they have 7 tanks ranging from little nanos to a 40 gal, and I raided the place. I left there with 10 red cherry shrimp, about 8 endlers, two of which are pregnant females and a fistful of plants most of which I can't identify yet. The cherry shrimp are living in the hang on breeder box, which I've set up something like a nano tank with black sand and a few lava rocks with java moss tied to them for now. Overnight it seems a few of the shrimp managed to push their way through the floss padding that I added to the hang on box's outflow to try and prevent exactly that (I caught another trying to do the same this morning). I've since replaced it with a piece of nylon stocking wrapped around which will hopefully discourage that kind of behaviour. I was able to trap and return the adults, but 2 juveniles are missing. There's plenty of nooks and cranny's to hide in, and it's a flourite gravel bottom, so they may still be hidden someplace in the main tank, but I suspect they ended up a midnight snack for one of the adult female endlers. One of the shrimp had eggs when we picked her out of the tank, and she managed the trip from jar to baggie to car to shotglass and finally into my tank, and she still has hold of them!! I'll have shrimplets before you know it, and once they start thriving a little in the hang on box, and the plant cover starts growing in on the main tank, I'll gradually migrate the larger shrimp to the main tank.
I can't help but think a small school of cardinal tetras wouldn't be out of place for some colour... hrmm...
After only a 3 week fishless cycle period, yesterday's water tests came up pH 7.4, 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, about 10ppm nitrate and 125 GH. I did a little water change to push down the nitrates just a wee bit and I was ready to go.
I spent the afternoon at my sister's place, where they have 7 tanks ranging from little nanos to a 40 gal, and I raided the place. I left there with 10 red cherry shrimp, about 8 endlers, two of which are pregnant females and a fistful of plants most of which I can't identify yet. The cherry shrimp are living in the hang on breeder box, which I've set up something like a nano tank with black sand and a few lava rocks with java moss tied to them for now. Overnight it seems a few of the shrimp managed to push their way through the floss padding that I added to the hang on box's outflow to try and prevent exactly that (I caught another trying to do the same this morning). I've since replaced it with a piece of nylon stocking wrapped around which will hopefully discourage that kind of behaviour. I was able to trap and return the adults, but 2 juveniles are missing. There's plenty of nooks and cranny's to hide in, and it's a flourite gravel bottom, so they may still be hidden someplace in the main tank, but I suspect they ended up a midnight snack for one of the adult female endlers. One of the shrimp had eggs when we picked her out of the tank, and she managed the trip from jar to baggie to car to shotglass and finally into my tank, and she still has hold of them!! I'll have shrimplets before you know it, and once they start thriving a little in the hang on box, and the plant cover starts growing in on the main tank, I'll gradually migrate the larger shrimp to the main tank.
I can't help but think a small school of cardinal tetras wouldn't be out of place for some colour... hrmm...