Tilapia Fry
The Blackwell System recently had babies (fry)! There have been a few mothers holding eggs, but we never stripped them in time. This time was different, we were ready!
We were trying an experiment with two mothers at the same time. Alex bought a small terrarium with a screen lid which was submersed into the large aquarium to make a small holding tank. With the two mothers holding eggs, we corralled one of the mothers into the holding tank. Our reasoning; the mother would spit the babies out and then we would release the mother back into the tank and keep the babies in the holding tank. The second mother fish would act as a control, to see how the babies survive (or dont) being spit into the tank directly.
Things did not go as planned. On the third day, we went to check on the mother in the holding tank first thing in the morning. The mother was in there (where else would she go?), but she was definitely was not holding eggs any more and there was none in the tank. She ate them.
The control mother was still holding her eggs though. We had watched a movie on YouTube about stripping mother tilapia of their eggs the day before, and have decided to try and strip the control mother as we were tired of loosing babies.
So we set up a bucket we could strip the mother in (that sound dirty!) and caught her in the net. While we where trying to get a good grip on her, she started spitting the eggs out! So we quickly got her in place and got all the eggs out. There were close to forty eggs and newly hatched eggs swimming and sitting in the bowl! It worked!
We got a turkey baster and transported the eggs and newborns into a plastic vial. We strapped a fiberglass window screen on top so they cannot swim out and placed that under the grow bed drain. And there it hangs!
Water returning from the grow beds flows into the tube and replaces the water. There are about 30 tilapia fry in the tube. |
The fry are growing every day. After the eggs yolk sacks were gone, we have fed them crushed fish food. A good way to tell if fish are healthy is the food test. Fish that eat and have no physical symptoms are usually doing alright. |
After they start to crowd this tube, which should not take long, the plan is to move them to the holding tank originally designed to house the holding mothers. The holding tank used to be resting on the bottom of the aquarium but too much fish poop was falling in it. It is now hanging kinda like the hatching tube but is semi-submersed.
Holding tank originally used to house tilapia mothers holding eggs. When the fry are big enough they will be transferred to this tank. |
0 comments:
Post a Comment