TorPeteO
Fish Crazy
Hey all,
First off, I don't have a GSP and don't plan on getting one until I've got my own house. But I have heard about them from a bunch of you who've got them, and so I've heard how very few, if any, people have successfully bred them.
One question I pondered was; Would a relatively abrupt transition (over 1-2 weeks, max) of SG into slightly brackish to near-freshwater of a pair of or three adult GSPs, who had been kept in near-marine conditions, possibly prompt them to breed?
The reason I ask this is that I've heard a lot of owners and specialists say that GSPs (in nature) are usually in freshwater when they're young, swim to brackish when they're juvenile, and move to full marine when they've become adults. If they live in freshwater as young, that means they had to have been spawned in freshwater, correct?
A reason I think this is plausible is that puffers, as a generality, are more hardy than most marine species. They can endure rather abrupt changes to temperature and to pH, which most full marine species don't often have to deal with, since the ocean is so large. This would lead one to believe that puffers can spend more time in more finnicky environments, such as freshwater ones.
Now, a question THIS raises is; Would the abrupt change in SG prove harmful or fatal to the colony of beneficial bacteria in the tank?If it did, the whole venture would be absurd, because the fish would only die, anyway, from polluted water.
Well, thanks for reading this far. If anyone can find problems with my reasoning, please let me know. If anyone wants to try this method out, give me a little credit when you publish your findings in a peer-evaluated publication. Thanks!
First off, I don't have a GSP and don't plan on getting one until I've got my own house. But I have heard about them from a bunch of you who've got them, and so I've heard how very few, if any, people have successfully bred them.
One question I pondered was; Would a relatively abrupt transition (over 1-2 weeks, max) of SG into slightly brackish to near-freshwater of a pair of or three adult GSPs, who had been kept in near-marine conditions, possibly prompt them to breed?
The reason I ask this is that I've heard a lot of owners and specialists say that GSPs (in nature) are usually in freshwater when they're young, swim to brackish when they're juvenile, and move to full marine when they've become adults. If they live in freshwater as young, that means they had to have been spawned in freshwater, correct?
A reason I think this is plausible is that puffers, as a generality, are more hardy than most marine species. They can endure rather abrupt changes to temperature and to pH, which most full marine species don't often have to deal with, since the ocean is so large. This would lead one to believe that puffers can spend more time in more finnicky environments, such as freshwater ones.
Now, a question THIS raises is; Would the abrupt change in SG prove harmful or fatal to the colony of beneficial bacteria in the tank?If it did, the whole venture would be absurd, because the fish would only die, anyway, from polluted water.
Well, thanks for reading this far. If anyone can find problems with my reasoning, please let me know. If anyone wants to try this method out, give me a little credit when you publish your findings in a peer-evaluated publication. Thanks!