There's probably tons of misinformation out there about guppies - kinda hoping livebearer keepers, hobbyists and breeders like @emeraldking can share their experiences of typical lifespans and the average number of batches of fry a female guppy can produce in a lifetime. Like to hear about the rare cases, but also the typical lifespan and amount of live births a female can handle.
Obviously the general health and hardiness of store bought, mass farmed guppies seems to have declined a lot compared to their hardy, beginner friendly, and almost invincible reputation guppies used to have 30-40 years ago. What caused the change?
I ask this because when I began maintaining my dad's tank and then set up my own, all I wanted was a happy little community of guppies and some shrimp, snails. But had a really hard time getting store bought guppies to survive. I'd buy a trio, see the females getting more and more gravid, then lose one, two, or all of them, usually before birthing any fry. My tank was cycled, well planted, testing perfectly with the API master test kit -I'd done everything I possibly could to make it perfect, but they'd up and die on me. I felt like a fish murderer, and almost gave up the hobby before I'd really started, because I felt awful about burying all these guppies (I don't bury fish anymore, I only dispose of fish in general waste now, as sad as that is, but thinking pathogens and ecosystems) and couldn't work out why I was failing to get the fish with the easiest breeding rep to survive long enough to have fry!
It was only when I came here, and went to some other groups on reddit and FB, and learned about how store bought guppies aren't the hardy fish the once were. But I did eventually succeed when I got some healthier, bred by a hobbyist guppies, had tons of fry because I'd lost so many, I bought all six beautiful females they had and some lovely males.
But when I began, I kept a tank log for each tank, and recorded everything for a long time. Mainly trying to work out when my tank would be ready for fish, then trying to work out why they kept dying on me. I logged every birth, every death, every water change and water test. Wouldn't always get a headcount for the fry, but would do a rough count and guestimate. Generally, once wormed and getting to 2/3/4 generations they were hardier and lived longer than the parents did, females had an big range of how many batches they produced, and once they'd had a lot of fry, the adult females seem to show signs of becoming worn out - does anyone know what I mean? Often start to develop a bend in the spine after many births, swim more lethargically, generally start to look aged and occasionally, a birth would go badly and I'd lose the female, or the female and fry if she passed during labour.
I'm guessing both general health, lifespan, and ability to produce lots of fry for a long time will vary a lot between wild type, fancy, and mutt guppies? But I don't know for sure. Kinda hoping you've written an article or two about it @emeraldking ! Please link it if so!
I ask because I short-sightedly adopted the unwanted fish from a tank that they swore were only male guppies, since I didn't want to breed them anymore - but when they arrived there were 10 or 12 male guppies, a ton of molly fry and adult trio - and a single, young, rather stressed female guppy! So I moved her to a different tank so she didn't get "male guppied" to death and tried to rehome her before she began popping out fry, but then parents falling ill and passing, my tanks were pretty neglected and on their own for a while beyond basic maintenance, so this single female popped out loads of batches of fry. I don't keep a log anymore and that tank is now packed with guppy/endler hybrids. A very rough estimate is about 200 offspring between her and her daughters, and there likely would have been more if I was taking better care of the tanks and feeding more live food/more water changes etc.
I got fond of my plain single female guppy, named Susan - and she's still identifiable as the OG largest female, and has been happily popping out fry for over a year now I think. Just today I noticed she's starting to bend a bit at the spine, and is swimming slower and resting more. Just not zipping around as fast, but also still seems to be the matriarch tank boss, and won't tolerate being hassled!
No sign of illness in her or any of the others, water parameters are fine (0/0/20, W/C due Wednesday) she isn't fin clamped or hiding in one spot, still eating, and looks gravid again... may surprise me and keep popping out more fry for another year or two, but I'm sad at seeing the signs of a worn out female who has gone through birthing 30 odd fry every month, and it's taken a toll, does that make sense?
But it's got me curious about other people's experiences, and any studies done!
Obviously the general health and hardiness of store bought, mass farmed guppies seems to have declined a lot compared to their hardy, beginner friendly, and almost invincible reputation guppies used to have 30-40 years ago. What caused the change?
I ask this because when I began maintaining my dad's tank and then set up my own, all I wanted was a happy little community of guppies and some shrimp, snails. But had a really hard time getting store bought guppies to survive. I'd buy a trio, see the females getting more and more gravid, then lose one, two, or all of them, usually before birthing any fry. My tank was cycled, well planted, testing perfectly with the API master test kit -I'd done everything I possibly could to make it perfect, but they'd up and die on me. I felt like a fish murderer, and almost gave up the hobby before I'd really started, because I felt awful about burying all these guppies (I don't bury fish anymore, I only dispose of fish in general waste now, as sad as that is, but thinking pathogens and ecosystems) and couldn't work out why I was failing to get the fish with the easiest breeding rep to survive long enough to have fry!
It was only when I came here, and went to some other groups on reddit and FB, and learned about how store bought guppies aren't the hardy fish the once were. But I did eventually succeed when I got some healthier, bred by a hobbyist guppies, had tons of fry because I'd lost so many, I bought all six beautiful females they had and some lovely males.
But when I began, I kept a tank log for each tank, and recorded everything for a long time. Mainly trying to work out when my tank would be ready for fish, then trying to work out why they kept dying on me. I logged every birth, every death, every water change and water test. Wouldn't always get a headcount for the fry, but would do a rough count and guestimate. Generally, once wormed and getting to 2/3/4 generations they were hardier and lived longer than the parents did, females had an big range of how many batches they produced, and once they'd had a lot of fry, the adult females seem to show signs of becoming worn out - does anyone know what I mean? Often start to develop a bend in the spine after many births, swim more lethargically, generally start to look aged and occasionally, a birth would go badly and I'd lose the female, or the female and fry if she passed during labour.
I'm guessing both general health, lifespan, and ability to produce lots of fry for a long time will vary a lot between wild type, fancy, and mutt guppies? But I don't know for sure. Kinda hoping you've written an article or two about it @emeraldking ! Please link it if so!
I ask because I short-sightedly adopted the unwanted fish from a tank that they swore were only male guppies, since I didn't want to breed them anymore - but when they arrived there were 10 or 12 male guppies, a ton of molly fry and adult trio - and a single, young, rather stressed female guppy! So I moved her to a different tank so she didn't get "male guppied" to death and tried to rehome her before she began popping out fry, but then parents falling ill and passing, my tanks were pretty neglected and on their own for a while beyond basic maintenance, so this single female popped out loads of batches of fry. I don't keep a log anymore and that tank is now packed with guppy/endler hybrids. A very rough estimate is about 200 offspring between her and her daughters, and there likely would have been more if I was taking better care of the tanks and feeding more live food/more water changes etc.
I got fond of my plain single female guppy, named Susan - and she's still identifiable as the OG largest female, and has been happily popping out fry for over a year now I think. Just today I noticed she's starting to bend a bit at the spine, and is swimming slower and resting more. Just not zipping around as fast, but also still seems to be the matriarch tank boss, and won't tolerate being hassled!
No sign of illness in her or any of the others, water parameters are fine (0/0/20, W/C due Wednesday) she isn't fin clamped or hiding in one spot, still eating, and looks gravid again... may surprise me and keep popping out more fry for another year or two, but I'm sad at seeing the signs of a worn out female who has gone through birthing 30 odd fry every month, and it's taken a toll, does that make sense?
But it's got me curious about other people's experiences, and any studies done!
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