You should have all the known species of molly listed and the sizes for each species.
eg: Poecilia latipinna grows to 6 inches
Poecilia velifera, females grow to 6 inches, males about 3-4
Poecilia sphenops, females grow to 4 inches, males about 3 inches
I'm not sure on exact sizes but if you check Wikipedia they have all the different species of Poecilia and their sizes.
With scientific names, the genus (first name) has a capital letter at the start and the species name starts with a lower case letter. Most books will italicise scientific names
Poecilia mexicana.
If you write a number of species in the same genus you can write it like
Poecilia formosa, P. obscura, P. picta. Or you can write it as
Poecilia formosa, obscura & picta. However, most scientists prefer
Poecilia formosa, P. obscura, P. picta.
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Most livebearers where hybridised many years ago to produce more colourful fish, and this includes mollies. The four species that were originally used include
Poecilia latipinna, velifera, formosa &
sphenops. Other species might have been used as well. They have been heavily inbred over the years and wild caught fish have been collected and bred with captive populations to improve bloodlines and the overall health of the captive stock.
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Wild livebearers tend to live in groups of 10-50 females with a few males hanging around. The females have a pecking order and are ruled by a big female and a group of females that back her up. Smaller females are kept lower down the pecking order by bullying from the bigger females.
Males are generally ignored by the big females except when breeding. Males impregnate the females with a small number of sperm packets during each mating. The females can carry the sperm packets for up to 6 months and use 1 sperm packet for each batch of eggs. Once a female has been with a male for more than a day, she will usually have 5 or 6 sperm packets inside her body and she will use them to fertilise the eggs when conditions are favourable.
If sexually mature female livebearers have been in an aquarium with a male, the females will be carrying sperm packets, so if people buy females from a mixed tank at the local pet shop, they will probably be pregnant when they are purchased. So buying a male and female is not always necessary.
The eggs develop and hatch inside the female and the babies spend a couple of weeks growing inside their mother before being born. The gestation period is about 1 month from the time the eggs are fertilised to the time the babies are born. The new born fry normally swim to the surface and hide among floating plants. Water Sprite is the best plant for livebearers because it has lots of leaves and branches, as well as a decent root system that provides plenty of hiding places for the mothers and fry.
Fry should be fed a variety of micro foods and do well on powdered fry foods that float on the surface, and newly hatched brineshrimp. You can add a paragraph or two on hatching brineshrimp eggs to provide more info.
Make sure the fry tank has an established air operated sponge filter to keep the water clean and stop the fry from being sucked up. Do regular partial water changes on the rearing tank using dechlorinated water.
Never handle baby fish with nets. If you have to transfer them out, use a small plastic container and scoop them out with some water. Baby livebearers should not be handled with a net until they are at least 1 month old. Baby egg layers should not be handled with a net until they are 2 months old. Rough handling can damage the baby fish.
Never use a net to lift heavily pregnant female livebearers out of the water because the pressure of being out of the water can cause them to give birth prematurely. If you have to move pregnant females, catch them in a net and put a bucket in the aquarium and lift it up under the net. Then lift the fish out in the bucket of water. Try to keep the pregnant females in water at all times.
Female livebearers do not normally eat their young if they are well fed and have lots of plants to hide in when giving birth. Most issues involving females eating their young is when the females are put in breeding nets where they get stressed out and eat the babies as soon as they are born. If the females are in a decent sized tank with lots of plants, they feel safe and secure and rarely touch their young.
Do not put pregnant fish in breeding nets or traps because it stresses them out. However, you can put the fry into a breeding net to keep them separate from the other fish. Don't waste your time with the plastic breeding traps, they are too small to be useful.
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If you buy fish from a petshop, they will probably be related, especially if you buy the same colour variety. If you want to breed those colour forms then that is fine but if you want to mix n match colours then buying different coloured males and females will give you more chance of getting unrelated fish.
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There's no need to set up a special breeding tank for them because they breed in a community tank. If you want to specifically breed certain colours then you need to get virgin females (young fish you breed that are kept away from males) or keep the mothers separate from the males for 6 months or so until they have used all the sperm packets they are carrying. Then put them in a tank with the male you are using.
Young females sometimes die during their first pregnancy (when giving birth) but if they don't have any problems they are normally fine after that. Young females produce smaller batches of young and will usually drop a batch every month, whereas older females have larger batches and might produce them once every couple of months.
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Sexing the four common livebearers (mollies, guppies, swordtails & platies) is easy. Males have a long thin anal (bottom) fin called a gonopodium. Females have a fan or triangular shaped anal fin. Males usually have a larger dorsal (top) fin and in
P. sphenops (I think it is) the top edge of the male's dorsal fin has a yellow edge.
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Breeder Boxes and Fry Boxes
Breeder boxes are clear plastic boxes that are used for the breeding of mollies and other livebearers, and are then re-used when the female is ready to give birth. These are hung on the side of the main molly tank and are the most economical choice for most people; unfortunately, moving the fish after it’s pregnant can result in a miscarriage, which is why other people prefer breeding tanks.
change after to while
moving the fish while it's pregnant can result in a miscarriage
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They should have algae in their tank to graze on during the day. You can encourage algae to grow by leaving the tank light on for a bit longer or you can put rocks, driftwood or plastic ornaments in a bucket of water outside in the sunlight. Algae will grow on these items and they can be moved into the tank for the fish to graze on.
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If you are going to quarantine fish it should be for at least 1 week and preferably 4 weeks. Most diseases will appear within a week of the fish going into a new tank but things like whitespot can take a week or more before they have built up in enough numbers to show up on the fish, especially if only 1 or 2 parasites were introduced into the aquarium with the new fish.
If you do quarantine them for a month you can deworm them and treat them for gill flukes before they get added to the main display tank. Intestinal worms and gill flukes need to be treated once a week for 3 or 4 weeks so all the eggs have time to hatch and the baby and adult worms/ flukes are killed. If you only do one treatment then eggs in the fish can hatch and reinfect the fish and all the other fishes in the tank.
Gill flukes and intestinal worms are regularly found in livebearers.
Protozoan infections (Costia, Chilodonella & Trichodina) are commonly found on them too. These cause the fish to rub on objects and the fish will develop cream, white or grey patches on their body.
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PH
PH is how hard or soft the water is. Betta fish like a pH of about 7.0. If the pH is too low or too high, the fish will develop problems. Mollies like moderately hard water, which is a PH of 6.5 to 8.0.
This needs to be rewritten.
Livebearers naturally occur in water with a pH above 7.0 and a general hardness (GH) above 200ppm. Mollies need a GH over 250ppm to do well. Some livebearers naturally occur in brackish water, which is water with some sodium chloride (salt) in it.
If water has lots of minerals in it is considered hard water. If water has no minerals or a low mineral content, it is considered soft water. Pure rain water is distilled water and has a pH of 7.0 and no minerals, and is considered very soft. Sea water has a pH of about 8.4 and has lots of minerals in it, and is considered very hard.
The minerals that are dissolved in the water can affect the pH. If there is lots of calcium in the water the pH will usually go above 7.0. If there are no minerals in the water the pH will start out at 7.0 but as things break down in the water, the acids and carbon dioxide produced by things decomposing in the water will cause the pH to drop below 7.0.
Some minerals like calcium carbonate or sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) will cause the pH to increase to very high levels. Sodium bicarbonate can raise the pH to 9.0+.
To make things more complicated, you can have hard water with a pH below 7.0, and you can have soft water with a pH above 7.0. It all depends on what is in the water. But normally, hard water will have a pH above 7.0 and soft water will have a pH below 7.0.
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Parameters & water testing
Parameters are the statistics of the water. There’s pH, nitrite, nitrate, ammonia, and general and carbonate hardness (GH and KH). You will need a master test kit to measure the most important things- pH, nitrite, nitrate, and ammonia.
When you write the different tests, try to put them in the order they occur in. eg: ammonia, nitrite, nitrate.
When you write general hardness (GH) and carbonate hardness (KH) put the GH and KH after each type of hardness so people know which is which.
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Tankmates
Mollies are generally peaceful, and can be housed with other peaceful fish that are about the same size or a little smaller; guppies, platies, danios, rasboras, and other small fish make good tankmates,
Remove danios and rasboras from this because they need different water chemistry to mollies. Mollies are peaceful and will get along with these fish but one group of fish won't be happy if kept together. The water might be too soft for the mollies or too hard for the rasboras and danios.
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Tail and Fin Types
Mollies can have different types of tails and fins. A normal molly tail is a horizontal fan shape, made of very thin bones and webbing. But a lyretail has two curved prongs sticking out of the top and bottom of the tail, forming a lyre shape.
The curved prongs are elongated fin rays. It's another mutation that has been exaggerated by inbreeding.
I'm sure there's more I can pick at but that should cover you for a bit.