DailyLunatic
New Member
First, a little background. I have a new tilapia pond. Dug April 10, 2023. Released 8 Pladdies from my Pot Pond to keep mosquitos down on May 15, 2023. Multiple failed attempts to get duckweed started. Stocked with Tilapia fingerlings July 14, 2023.
Over the last few days I have noticed several small guppy/minnow sized fish nibbling at the Tilapia feed. These are a fraction of the size of the Tilapia fingerlings, so I know they could not be stunted Tilapia, and my Tilapia would not be spawning until February or March of 2024 at the earliest. I introduced some smaller guppy sized pellets for them as well, which the larger took well enough, though the smaller still had to nibble around it.
There are dozens of them and range in size from 1/4" to 1-1/2". They are hard to make out as the water is milky (it is a non-ornamental pond). At first I had assumed they were decedents of the Pladdies I had released, but the coloring was wrong. Even in the milky water they were too pale and not a bright orange. If they were not the Pladdies, then I could not figure out how they got into the pond.
Today I got a better look and went to the inter-webs to see what kind of fish these might be. I am in Surin Provence, Central Thailand. It 'appears' to be this guy, or a close relative. They have the black line along the dorsal ridge, but I do not remember seeing a white dot on the head. They are distributed among ornamental fish keepers. If it is this guy, he will be going in my home aquarium when I am ready.
A Blue Panchax Killifish
On to my Question:
I've been trying to figure out how this guy got into so new a pond. There has been no flooding since the pond was dug, (although the area is prone to flooding).
I know that some Killifish are Annuals, meaning they lay their eggs, and the eggs can survive, even require, months and longer periods of drought, hatching when water is available again. Where the ponds have been dug used to be a rice field, so that would fit. However, information I have been able to find indicates that the Blue Panchax is a Perennial, not an Annual.
The only things I can think of are:
-Eggs Hitchhiked on a bird or the like. If so, Would they have increased in population so quickly?
-Eggs Hitchhiked in one of the duckweed attempts? Most likely July 20, 2023 as it was the least inspected. A dip and dump from a neighbor's pond. Eggs perhaps, but I doubt fish were included. Again, it askes the question how they could increase in population so quickly.
-A variety of Killie that looks similar to Blue Panchax, but is Annual.
-Wife and locals insist they flop along the ground, in the rain, across the rice field, up a 3 foot berm, across a 10 foot flat of ground, and into my pond. They are here, why do you care?
Have no fear. I like the idea of having a mosquito fish in the pond. (-...zzzz...smack- believe me, I like the idea) I encourage their continued health, but if they are an annual fish, that is not likely. They would age and die, and the eggs would not dry as required.
I just can't figure out how so many got in there so quickly.
Just tossing this out for discussion.
Thank you for your attention,
-sterling
Over the last few days I have noticed several small guppy/minnow sized fish nibbling at the Tilapia feed. These are a fraction of the size of the Tilapia fingerlings, so I know they could not be stunted Tilapia, and my Tilapia would not be spawning until February or March of 2024 at the earliest. I introduced some smaller guppy sized pellets for them as well, which the larger took well enough, though the smaller still had to nibble around it.
There are dozens of them and range in size from 1/4" to 1-1/2". They are hard to make out as the water is milky (it is a non-ornamental pond). At first I had assumed they were decedents of the Pladdies I had released, but the coloring was wrong. Even in the milky water they were too pale and not a bright orange. If they were not the Pladdies, then I could not figure out how they got into the pond.
Today I got a better look and went to the inter-webs to see what kind of fish these might be. I am in Surin Provence, Central Thailand. It 'appears' to be this guy, or a close relative. They have the black line along the dorsal ridge, but I do not remember seeing a white dot on the head. They are distributed among ornamental fish keepers. If it is this guy, he will be going in my home aquarium when I am ready.
A Blue Panchax Killifish
Aplocheilus panchax summary page
www.fishbase.se
On to my Question:
I've been trying to figure out how this guy got into so new a pond. There has been no flooding since the pond was dug, (although the area is prone to flooding).
I know that some Killifish are Annuals, meaning they lay their eggs, and the eggs can survive, even require, months and longer periods of drought, hatching when water is available again. Where the ponds have been dug used to be a rice field, so that would fit. However, information I have been able to find indicates that the Blue Panchax is a Perennial, not an Annual.
The only things I can think of are:
-Eggs Hitchhiked on a bird or the like. If so, Would they have increased in population so quickly?
-Eggs Hitchhiked in one of the duckweed attempts? Most likely July 20, 2023 as it was the least inspected. A dip and dump from a neighbor's pond. Eggs perhaps, but I doubt fish were included. Again, it askes the question how they could increase in population so quickly.
-A variety of Killie that looks similar to Blue Panchax, but is Annual.
-Wife and locals insist they flop along the ground, in the rain, across the rice field, up a 3 foot berm, across a 10 foot flat of ground, and into my pond. They are here, why do you care?
Have no fear. I like the idea of having a mosquito fish in the pond. (-...zzzz...smack- believe me, I like the idea) I encourage their continued health, but if they are an annual fish, that is not likely. They would age and die, and the eggs would not dry as required.
I just can't figure out how so many got in there so quickly.
Just tossing this out for discussion.
Thank you for your attention,
-sterling
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