Texas Cichlid Spawn & Fry Development
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 11 มี.ค. 2011
- Texas Cichlid (Herichthys cyanoguttatus) Spawn & Fry Development. Their tank measures a pH of ~7.8 (API chemical test kit) and water temperature varies between 74-77 degrees Fahrenheit (room temperature). The two were collected from different locations along the San Marcos River (San Marcos, Texas). The fry are now being fed a varied diet to include frozen, decapsulated BBS (baby brine shrimp) from Darby's Tropicals.
Awesome. Love watching cichlid parents inspecting their offspring just after the babies hatch.
Thanks for sharing this beautiful and extraordinary video, never seen so close.
GREAT EXPLANATION & HISTORY & VIEWING OF THE ACTUAL FERTILIZATION GUY. FANTASTIC.
Excellent work on this video.
@myczer Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Best video, till date!!
Thanks for making this video... it is very helpful for us
Well done.
nice
I want one the colors are so nice
Do you have to move the fry from the parents? Or an they develop with the parents.
The top fin of one of the fish is chewed off lol wow
You caught these?
feel like watching animal planet, nice vid ;)
Hi! I have a question for y'all.
Do we need to separate both parents from the tank.
Yes . It is necessary
Anybody can tell me i have only female texa fish she is only one in aquarium since 3 to 4 months ,but last night she gave eggs ,is it possible to born babies
My green Texas pair keep laying eggs and can watch the male fertilizing them and they are super aggressive but the next day all eggs have been eaten !!! I feed them plenty and have them in their own tank ! How can I overcome this ??
@Rangers Fan hi there! Hope you are keeping well & safe!
Do we need to separate the parents? How we collect eggs, wouldn't that eggs gets damage while collecting?
when can start to feed the fries?
Yangrulez maybe when they are 1 and a half weeks old, that’s what I did
When I remove baby chiclid ? Please help me I am have hurry my Texas chiclid give egg
Hold on don’t Texas cichlids Fan their eggs for oxygen too or do bluegill just do that