Corydoras82
New Member
Hello! I am new to this forum so I hope I am posting this in the right spot. I have some questions regarding my pepper cory fry. This is my first time successfully raising any. The first couple go rounds, didn't go so well, as I am just learning. If anybody could please help answer my questions, I would greatly appreciate it!
Here is some background before I ask some questions:
I have my Pepper Cory fry in a 12 gallon plastic tub at the moment. They were in a much smaller tub before that but I was losing many of them to bacterial infection because I did not have any substrate and they were laying in the bio film on the bottom of the tank. I have a thin layer of aquarium sand at the bottom, a sponge filter on opposite sides of the tank (one of them has an air pump attached). I must have about 100 hatched Cory fry. My mama Cory was laying eggs like crazy. January 5th the first batch of eggs started hatching. She kept laying eggs about every 5 days, maybe around 50 eggs at a time. There are 9 different batches of eggs that hatched so I have 9 groups of different aged Cory's. The oldest ones being a little over 1 month old and the youngest ones just a few days old.
Questions:
*I am losing a few of my oldest fry every few days. I can't understand why. It's like once they reach a month old, they start dying off. They will float at the surface of the water, usually upside down, and they have very big stomachs that look silver and shiny? Is that swim bladder? If so, what can I do about it?
*I have sand substrate since I learned the hard way about the biofilm on the bottom of a bare tank. Should I be wiping off the sides of the tub when I do water changes? It has a film on it but some of them like to swim around the sides and seem like they might be eating off it?
*I have noticed some variations in some of the fry. Some are dark colored and active and seem to be doing quite well as far as I can tell, but others are so pale I can hardly see them. The pale ones are not very active. I have also still been losing a small amount here and there due to what I assume is bacterial infection? They are white and covered with a bit of fungus like the eggs tend to get on them. Are the pale ones on their way to dying of bacterial infection or might they actually be ok? I thought I read somewhere that they can camouflage themselves? Might that be the case?
* I recently tested the tank and the nirtite and nitrate levels were not good. I change the water and clean the substrate with a turkey baster 1 to 2 times a day. How can I remedy the nitrite/nitrate situation besides just doing water changes? Is it safe to add beneficial bacteria to the fry tank? The brand I have is called Seed I believe.
*Am I missing anything in my fry tank? Would adding live plants be beneficial?
* Is it too early to add my largest fry, which are a little over a month old, to the parent tank? I would like to before I lose anymore of the bigger ones to swim bladder or bacterial infection. I am just not sure if it would be too stressful at that age, to add them to a different tank.
*Like I mentioned, I have probably about 100 fry at the moment. I am worried about overcrowding. They are in a 12 gallon and all have plenty of space but they grow so quick and I worry about the overcrowding. Have I way surpassed the amount of fry that should be in a 12 gallon tank?
*I would like to add more sand to the tank, as I can't help but suck some up each time I clean the tank. Is it ok to put new sand over old sand?
*Any advice on the diet the fry should need? I am currently feeding them Micron nature fry food. Since there are different aged Cory's I also add something else, usually an algea wafer, crushed up Tropical flakes, Aquatic Frog and Tadpole Food (my adult Cory's love them), or crushed up Baby Shrimp. I can't tell if they are eating the tadpole food but I think they are. They are interested in the algea wafers when I first put them in but they don't seem to eat much of it overall. They didn't seem to care for the crushed up baby shrimp. I feed them a couple times a day. The micron fry food is green and it makes the water look awful. Can someone please suggest a good diet I can provide for them that would meet all their needs?
Here is some background before I ask some questions:
I have my Pepper Cory fry in a 12 gallon plastic tub at the moment. They were in a much smaller tub before that but I was losing many of them to bacterial infection because I did not have any substrate and they were laying in the bio film on the bottom of the tank. I have a thin layer of aquarium sand at the bottom, a sponge filter on opposite sides of the tank (one of them has an air pump attached). I must have about 100 hatched Cory fry. My mama Cory was laying eggs like crazy. January 5th the first batch of eggs started hatching. She kept laying eggs about every 5 days, maybe around 50 eggs at a time. There are 9 different batches of eggs that hatched so I have 9 groups of different aged Cory's. The oldest ones being a little over 1 month old and the youngest ones just a few days old.
Questions:
*I am losing a few of my oldest fry every few days. I can't understand why. It's like once they reach a month old, they start dying off. They will float at the surface of the water, usually upside down, and they have very big stomachs that look silver and shiny? Is that swim bladder? If so, what can I do about it?
*I have sand substrate since I learned the hard way about the biofilm on the bottom of a bare tank. Should I be wiping off the sides of the tub when I do water changes? It has a film on it but some of them like to swim around the sides and seem like they might be eating off it?
*I have noticed some variations in some of the fry. Some are dark colored and active and seem to be doing quite well as far as I can tell, but others are so pale I can hardly see them. The pale ones are not very active. I have also still been losing a small amount here and there due to what I assume is bacterial infection? They are white and covered with a bit of fungus like the eggs tend to get on them. Are the pale ones on their way to dying of bacterial infection or might they actually be ok? I thought I read somewhere that they can camouflage themselves? Might that be the case?
* I recently tested the tank and the nirtite and nitrate levels were not good. I change the water and clean the substrate with a turkey baster 1 to 2 times a day. How can I remedy the nitrite/nitrate situation besides just doing water changes? Is it safe to add beneficial bacteria to the fry tank? The brand I have is called Seed I believe.
*Am I missing anything in my fry tank? Would adding live plants be beneficial?
* Is it too early to add my largest fry, which are a little over a month old, to the parent tank? I would like to before I lose anymore of the bigger ones to swim bladder or bacterial infection. I am just not sure if it would be too stressful at that age, to add them to a different tank.
*Like I mentioned, I have probably about 100 fry at the moment. I am worried about overcrowding. They are in a 12 gallon and all have plenty of space but they grow so quick and I worry about the overcrowding. Have I way surpassed the amount of fry that should be in a 12 gallon tank?
*I would like to add more sand to the tank, as I can't help but suck some up each time I clean the tank. Is it ok to put new sand over old sand?
*Any advice on the diet the fry should need? I am currently feeding them Micron nature fry food. Since there are different aged Cory's I also add something else, usually an algea wafer, crushed up Tropical flakes, Aquatic Frog and Tadpole Food (my adult Cory's love them), or crushed up Baby Shrimp. I can't tell if they are eating the tadpole food but I think they are. They are interested in the algea wafers when I first put them in but they don't seem to eat much of it overall. They didn't seem to care for the crushed up baby shrimp. I feed them a couple times a day. The micron fry food is green and it makes the water look awful. Can someone please suggest a good diet I can provide for them that would meet all their needs?