Hello!
I bought a pair of blue rams at my LFS this weekend to go in my 29 US Gal newly planted tank with 8 peppered cories and some harlequin rasboras. They've been doing great but yesterday I noticed they had started chasing the cories around. I thought this was unusual until I looked closer and saw that they were taking turns guarding about 30-40 eggs! They seem to be excellent parents and constantly fan the eggs and keep pesky cories from eating them.
But I'm not sure what to do now. I've never had eggs before and when I've done research on raising blue ram fry it always seems confusing. First of all, the eggs are on a fine gravel substrate, but I read that I should take the eggs out. How do I do that without taking a ton of gravel with? I have a 10 gal that isn't being used, so should I put the eggs in there? With an airstone, sponge filter, both or neither? Should I wait until the babies have hatched or are free swimming until I move them? Theoretically could I raise them in a community tank like they are now? I think that the cories and rasboras might get to the food before the babies, though.
Sorry for all of the questions, I just want to do this right. If anyone has any helpful tips, it'd be most appreciated. I'm quite excited about this! It's neat seeing my rams really protect their future babies.
Thanks,
Dave
I bought a pair of blue rams at my LFS this weekend to go in my 29 US Gal newly planted tank with 8 peppered cories and some harlequin rasboras. They've been doing great but yesterday I noticed they had started chasing the cories around. I thought this was unusual until I looked closer and saw that they were taking turns guarding about 30-40 eggs! They seem to be excellent parents and constantly fan the eggs and keep pesky cories from eating them.
But I'm not sure what to do now. I've never had eggs before and when I've done research on raising blue ram fry it always seems confusing. First of all, the eggs are on a fine gravel substrate, but I read that I should take the eggs out. How do I do that without taking a ton of gravel with? I have a 10 gal that isn't being used, so should I put the eggs in there? With an airstone, sponge filter, both or neither? Should I wait until the babies have hatched or are free swimming until I move them? Theoretically could I raise them in a community tank like they are now? I think that the cories and rasboras might get to the food before the babies, though.
Sorry for all of the questions, I just want to do this right. If anyone has any helpful tips, it'd be most appreciated. I'm quite excited about this! It's neat seeing my rams really protect their future babies.
Thanks,
Dave