Well it was an idea. Still no other deathsThose are cory eggs, not ram eggs, I'm fairly certain...and corys usually don't aggressively protect them once laid, that I know of
Well it was an idea. Still no other deathsThose are cory eggs, not ram eggs, I'm fairly certain...and corys usually don't aggressively protect them once laid, that I know of
Understood...and good to hear of no more deathsWell it was an idea. Still no other deaths
Those are cory eggs, not ram eggs, I'm fairly certain...and corys usually don't aggressively protect them once laid, that I know of
Pandas. Not planning at this point until the other issue is straightened out for sure. They look infertile, but waiting to be sure. BTW, no dead fish. If this continues, the thread can be put to rest. I don't know how to end the thread though. Thanks for asking about the corysNope, cories don't protect their eggs. They'll eat them if they happen to bumble across them. They seem to a pretty short-term memory when it comes to their eggs!
@2loud Which species of cory? Any plans to try to save the eggs and raise some wrigglers? They're adorable when they go from looking like little insects, to actual tiny little fish!
Pandas. Not planning at this point until the other issue is straightened out for sure. They look infertile, but waiting to be sure. BTW, no dead fish. If this continues, the thread can be put to rest. I don't know how to end the thread though. Thanks for asking about the corys
As I live in Texas, my water supply from the city cold water is 78 to 79 degrees.. . It is treated with prime. It never gets below 77.2 on occasion when I am working on tank. Having watched it closely due to the current issue it has been running 78.4 to 79, which would seem a tolerable spread . The heaters are set to on at 77., so it can't get lower. Rams I can set at 80, and they are in a quarantine at the moment of 20 gal by themselves. My research prior to getting them was between 78 and 85 degrees so running a general 78.4 to 79 was within recommended specs. Getting anything below 77 has always been the issue here,which is why I didn't house golfish any longer. Even with no heaters. Appreciate the concern tho. Thinking of clearing tank and starting a species specific instead of community tank at this point@TwoTankAmin posted as complete and thorough a response as anyone could given the circumstances.
I have another issue to comment on, the rams. You said they are now in another tank, are they on their own, or are there other fish? I ask not so much thinking of "disease" spreading (though that is a possibility if they are in with other fish), but an issue with temperature. The species Mikrogeophagus ramirezi which includes all the varieties including the German Blue mentioned here needs warmth. It should be housed in water that is in the range 80-86F/27-30C. preferably mid-range. [The other "ram," the Bolivian, is M. altispinosus and does not demand this high a temperature, just for the record.] Kept at lower temperatures such as the 77F mentioned in this thread, the common (German, blue, gold, etc) ram will not last long, maybe a few months, but certainly not the 4-5 years it should. At least, I have never come across any reliable data that it will live this long in less than 80F/27C. If the two are on their own, you might consider increasing the temperature and leaving them in their own tank.
There are some fish that can manage long-term at these higher temperatures, but not most of those mentioned in post #1 of this thread. Danios, neon tetras, and cories cannot be housed at or above 80F/27C, preferably in the mid-70's. Black neons would be at the upper limit of their range at 80F and this is not advisable long-term.
@TwoTankAmin posted as complete and thorough a response as anyone could given the circumstances.
I have another issue to comment on, the rams. You said they are now in another tank, are they on their own, or are there other fish? I ask not so much thinking of "disease" spreading (though that is a possibility if they are in with other fish), but an issue with temperature. The species Mikrogeophagus ramirezi which includes all the varieties including the German Blue mentioned here needs warmth. It should be housed in water that is in the range 80-86F/27-30C. preferably mid-range. [The other "ram," the Bolivian, is M. altispinosus and does not demand this high a temperature, just for the record.] Kept at lower temperatures such as the 77F mentioned in this thread, the common (German, blue, gold, etc) ram will not last long, maybe a few months, but certainly not the 4-5 years it should. At least, I have never come across any reliable data that it will live this long in less than 80F/27C. If the two are on their own, you might consider increasing the temperature and leaving them in their own tank.
There are some fish that can manage long-term at these higher temperatures, but not most of those mentioned in post #1 of this thread. Danios, neon tetras, and cories cannot be housed at or above 80F/27C, preferably in the mid-70's. Black neons would be at the upper limit of their range at 80F and this is not advisable long-term.