vince82
Fish Fanatic
I got some otocinclus (20) from a wholesaler for 2$ (canadian) each.. Expected ~50% yield (half dying) and......... half died.
They arrived with 1 dead in the bag, water thoroughly green from whatever medicine they placed in it..
Probably was originally blue with methylene and became green in travel? Or is there some green stuff used in the trade?
I quarantined them in a 20L plastic container with a sponge air filter (not cycled) and did 50% water changes (taking water from the main tank and putting it in the quarantine container) for a week, and started counting the deaths. One week in I had 9 death and one dying.
So, what did I do wrong? Here's my guess:
One thing common to ALL of them was they were THIN. Like properly thin. And despite giving them food, most of them did not eat any of the sinking pellet and algae wafers I gave them. They tried to clean the sides of the container and were not interested in the artificial food. Otos are still not bread commercially and so these are probably wild caught? they might not have seen a pellet before in their life as in the wholesale chain they are not usually fed, and they had probably fasted for 2 or 3 weeks.
So I took a little bit of wood from the main tank with a couple anubias petit on it and some algae, and they started eating from that.
Couple days later, some of them had finally started to look not so emaciated so I took the plunge and moved all of them to my main tank, that up to that point only housed 5 Julii corys and a handful of cory fry.
They immediately all latched to the various wood and CLEANED THEM, some wood are in full light and were full of diatom algae, they are now brown again.
It's been 3 days and the otos all colored up nicely, all look plump, and there wasn't any other deat.
So I just took all of the plants from what was my attempt at growing some emersed for selling them, and filled the quarantine container with them. I might get another batch just to test if I was right.
Then today I saw this video from aquarium coop and realized I probably did the right thing.. and I could have pivoted faster and probably saved a few more
They arrived with 1 dead in the bag, water thoroughly green from whatever medicine they placed in it..
Probably was originally blue with methylene and became green in travel? Or is there some green stuff used in the trade?
I quarantined them in a 20L plastic container with a sponge air filter (not cycled) and did 50% water changes (taking water from the main tank and putting it in the quarantine container) for a week, and started counting the deaths. One week in I had 9 death and one dying.
So, what did I do wrong? Here's my guess:
One thing common to ALL of them was they were THIN. Like properly thin. And despite giving them food, most of them did not eat any of the sinking pellet and algae wafers I gave them. They tried to clean the sides of the container and were not interested in the artificial food. Otos are still not bread commercially and so these are probably wild caught? they might not have seen a pellet before in their life as in the wholesale chain they are not usually fed, and they had probably fasted for 2 or 3 weeks.
So I took a little bit of wood from the main tank with a couple anubias petit on it and some algae, and they started eating from that.
Couple days later, some of them had finally started to look not so emaciated so I took the plunge and moved all of them to my main tank, that up to that point only housed 5 Julii corys and a handful of cory fry.
They immediately all latched to the various wood and CLEANED THEM, some wood are in full light and were full of diatom algae, they are now brown again.
It's been 3 days and the otos all colored up nicely, all look plump, and there wasn't any other deat.
So I just took all of the plants from what was my attempt at growing some emersed for selling them, and filled the quarantine container with them. I might get another batch just to test if I was right.
Then today I saw this video from aquarium coop and realized I probably did the right thing.. and I could have pivoted faster and probably saved a few more