Tokis-Phoenix
^_^
Ok so i know this should realy go in the livebearers section, but since i feel it is such an important issue i think it desearves the more likely larger amount of posts/comments here, anyways...
So much of the time now i see threads like "my livebearers have had fry and i don't have the space for them" or "i can't find anywhere to rehome my fry, my lfs won't accept them" or "i just got some female platys and they've had fry and i don't know what to do or what to feed them etc" etc.
When you buy mixed gender group of livebearers or all-female groups, be prepeared they will almost definatly have fry. Livebearers, particualy guppys, platys and mollys, are notorious for reproducing on a regular and large scale.
Mollys can have up to 100+ fry for example.
Guppys can breed once a month, to name a few.
Having all-female groups of livebearers does not also eliminate the posibilty of fry, because they can store sperm for up to 7 pregancys and all they have to be is with a male of the same species at the breeders place before they go to your lfs to have fry.
What i dislike is the irresponsability of people breeding livebearers nowdays...
Ask yourself, why do you want to breed them? Is it just because "you want to"? There are millions of livebearers already available in lfs's needing homes, and unless you want to better the species in some way, why add to the growing problem of livebearers already out there needing homes?
Trust me, breeding livebearers isn't much of a breeding experience. You put a male and some females in a tank, they mate and get pregnant and you end up with the fry; they pretty much do all this on their own and it isn't exactly a challenging or enlightening experience.
What will you do with the fry when they are born? As i have already mentioned, livebearers can produce large quantitys of fry and you cannot rely on your guppys just producing a few; what will you do if you end up with 40?
Sure, you can put them down, but i think this is very irresponsable if you knew you couldn't accomodate the fry in the first place; they are living baby creatures after all and life shouldn't be somthing thats thrown away when it becomes inconvinient.
When you put a male and female livebearers together, they breed. simple as that.
Also, the other note i'd like to mention to people trying to acheive fry as quickly as posible, buying an already heavily pregnant livebearer as it is very irresponsable and stressfull on the pregnant fish.
You will dramatically increase/raise the chances of her having birth complications like miscarriages, still born fry, fry defects, poor batchs of fry, the increased chance of the mother fish dying during giving birth or not been able to give birth normally/with ease at all; you also increase the general chance of her dying from stress from going from the lfs to settling into your tank.
If you cannot have the patience to breed livebearers yourself without cheating via buying pre-heavily pregnated fish, you probably shouldn't be breeding them at all.
The other thing i'd like to mention is about mixing genders in livebearers; more than too often i see people with mixed gender groups with ratios like 3males to 1female or 4males to 6females etc and then they post in asking why is their female guppy getting harrassed and nipped to near death by all their male guppys etc.
The minimum mixed gender ratio for the majority of livebearers is 1male per 2-3females, although in swordtails the female ratio is greatly increased when having more than one male due to male swords behavior not to get along with each other very well at all.
I also advise adding an extra female for every extra male you get after 2, i.e 3males per 7females, or 4males per 10females etc.
This is quite basic information to take in, please consider at least these aspects of keeping livebearers before you get them.
Any comments are much appreciated
So much of the time now i see threads like "my livebearers have had fry and i don't have the space for them" or "i can't find anywhere to rehome my fry, my lfs won't accept them" or "i just got some female platys and they've had fry and i don't know what to do or what to feed them etc" etc.
When you buy mixed gender group of livebearers or all-female groups, be prepeared they will almost definatly have fry. Livebearers, particualy guppys, platys and mollys, are notorious for reproducing on a regular and large scale.
Mollys can have up to 100+ fry for example.
Guppys can breed once a month, to name a few.
Having all-female groups of livebearers does not also eliminate the posibilty of fry, because they can store sperm for up to 7 pregancys and all they have to be is with a male of the same species at the breeders place before they go to your lfs to have fry.
What i dislike is the irresponsability of people breeding livebearers nowdays...
Ask yourself, why do you want to breed them? Is it just because "you want to"? There are millions of livebearers already available in lfs's needing homes, and unless you want to better the species in some way, why add to the growing problem of livebearers already out there needing homes?
Trust me, breeding livebearers isn't much of a breeding experience. You put a male and some females in a tank, they mate and get pregnant and you end up with the fry; they pretty much do all this on their own and it isn't exactly a challenging or enlightening experience.
What will you do with the fry when they are born? As i have already mentioned, livebearers can produce large quantitys of fry and you cannot rely on your guppys just producing a few; what will you do if you end up with 40?
Sure, you can put them down, but i think this is very irresponsable if you knew you couldn't accomodate the fry in the first place; they are living baby creatures after all and life shouldn't be somthing thats thrown away when it becomes inconvinient.
When you put a male and female livebearers together, they breed. simple as that.
Also, the other note i'd like to mention to people trying to acheive fry as quickly as posible, buying an already heavily pregnant livebearer as it is very irresponsable and stressfull on the pregnant fish.
You will dramatically increase/raise the chances of her having birth complications like miscarriages, still born fry, fry defects, poor batchs of fry, the increased chance of the mother fish dying during giving birth or not been able to give birth normally/with ease at all; you also increase the general chance of her dying from stress from going from the lfs to settling into your tank.
If you cannot have the patience to breed livebearers yourself without cheating via buying pre-heavily pregnated fish, you probably shouldn't be breeding them at all.
The other thing i'd like to mention is about mixing genders in livebearers; more than too often i see people with mixed gender groups with ratios like 3males to 1female or 4males to 6females etc and then they post in asking why is their female guppy getting harrassed and nipped to near death by all their male guppys etc.
The minimum mixed gender ratio for the majority of livebearers is 1male per 2-3females, although in swordtails the female ratio is greatly increased when having more than one male due to male swords behavior not to get along with each other very well at all.
I also advise adding an extra female for every extra male you get after 2, i.e 3males per 7females, or 4males per 10females etc.
This is quite basic information to take in, please consider at least these aspects of keeping livebearers before you get them.
Any comments are much appreciated