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FAQs on the Swordtails 1
Related Articles: Swordtails
& Poeciliids: Guppies, Platies, Swordtails,
Mollies
by Neale Monks, Livebearing Fishes
by Bob Fenner,
Related FAQs: Swordtails 2,
Swordtail Identification,
Swordtail Behavior,
Swordtail Compatibility,
Swordtail Selection,
Swordtail Systems,
Swordtail Feeding,
Swordtail Disease,
Swordtail Reproduction,
Livebearers,
Guppies,
Platies, Mollies,
Livebearer Identification,
Livebearer Behavior,
Livebearer Compatibility,
Livebearer Selection,
Livebearer Systems,
Livebearer Feeding,
Livebearer Disease,
Livebearer Reproduction,
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Swordtails, Bacterial Infections, Betta Fin Deterioration - 10/12/2005
Hi, I have 5 swordtails, 3 male and 2 female....I know, bad ratio...they
were a gift, I didn't pick the sexes. One of the female swordtails has two
large patches one on top her head and the other on the side of her head.
When I look close at these areas, it looks as though the scales aren't there
anymore, it looks fluffy.
<Sounds like a bacterial infection.... possibly Columnaris.>
She also has one fin whose edge is white, I first thought fin rot, but am
not sure.
<Likely related to the other problem(s) present on her.>
So far I haven't seen any signs in my other swords. I also have a Betta and
a Chinese butterfly sucker. The Betta has been a long time habitant of my
tank, but I am noticing his tailfin is tattering on the ends, I was
wondering if it was fin rot or aggressive swordtails?
<Perhaps either/or. Observe the swords for any aggression toward the Betta,
but I fear this may be bacterial as well, related to the same problem as the
female sword.>
The swordtails are new and swim vigorously around the aquarium, so that is
why I thought maybe they were picking at his fins. Thank you for any help
you can give!! Tara
<On top of this, be testing/maintaining water quality - keep ammonia and
nitrite at ZERO, nitrate less than 20ppm, with water changes. Wishing you
well, -Sabrina>
Lumpy Swordtail - 09/21/2005
I have a male swordtail in a 20 gal tank. I noticed a lump on his top of
his body near the end of the top fin, and it appears to be getting bigger. I
almost looks like a pimple that needs squeezed. I have 2 platy's, 2 female
swordtails and another male swordtail in this tank as well. What is this?
<Many possibilities, here; there's just not enough information to go off. I
would recommend that you look up information on lymphocystis, Columnaris, and
mycobacteriosis for starters.>
How can I treat it, and should I remove him from the community tank?
<Well, without knowing exactly what you're looking at, my first caution to you
is to test your water quality; maintain ammonia and nitrite at ZERO, and nitrate
at less than 20ppm, with water changes. From there, see if the fish improves,
and again, look into those diseases above.>
I would appreciate your help.
Thank You, -Kim Coursin
<Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Aggressive swordtails 8/9/05
Hey I have a 15 gallon with 3 "teenager" marble sailfin mollies, and 6
swordtails (2 red-white, 2 green, 1 black, 1 pineapple).
I have 3 males and 3 females, and I know that the female ratio needs to be
higher, so I put 1 male in my 10 gallon, but my males continued to be very
aggressive.
<Happens... ratios are better at three or more females per male>
The mollies seem to have nothing to do with the swords, and the swords are not
aggressive toward the mollies.
<About right>
So I continued to watch them and the "bully" male is quite larger than the other
2 males, and 2 females. He chases around the two males and the two smaller
females. However, the large female chases him around!!
So is there anything you suggest before I can find some time to find some new
healthy females to add?? Thanks.
BMERANG
<Separate the bully... in a hanging net, breeding trap, floating colander in the
tank. Bob Fenner>
Swordtail repro., spaces between sentences 7/29/05
Hi, this is Lynn and I wanted to know if you can answer this question for
me. Last night I noticed my pregnant female swordtail showing signs that she
was going to have her babies, so I put her in the breeding trap. But it's been
a few days now and she didn't have them yet.... Maybe I put her in too early?
<Maybe>
How can I help her have her babies in the breeding trap?
<Just letting time go by. If the fish doesn't produce young in a few days, I'd
return her to the main tank. Bob Fenner>
Swordtail breeding, studying 7/7/05
Hi, I noticed some articles about the swordtails, but didn't really see any
answer to how you can tell is a swordtail is pregnant or not...
<... seeing the eyes of the young near the vent... its enlargement, change
to clear...>
i have two swords, the one is trying to back in with his sword, and so would
it be wise to put them both in a breeding tank?
<Uh, no... the male stays out>
or just assume she is already getting pregnant and just put her in her
separate tank?? and if i should put both in, how do i know when to take the
male back out? thanks a ton!
Luke P
<Keep studying... books, the Net... Bob Fenner>
Swordtail Breeding
Our green swordtail just got done have about 35 babies. I have them in a
2 way breeder. Yesterday she got picked on and has a booboo on her side. How
long should I leave her in the 2 way breeder. The "bully" fish is no longer with
us but I didn't know if the male swordtail would pick on her. He is the only
other fish we have. Please let me know when you think she should be strong
enough to protect herself. Thanks!
<I would watch her energy level. If she seems to be swimming well, then
release her. I'm sure the male will chase and breed with her. But that's the
life of a Swordtail. Add some plants or other places to hide if it gets too bad.
If she's hurt so badly that she is having a hard time swimming, leave her in
there for a few day. Make sure she's eating before you let her out. Don>
Swordtail Fry Questions
Hi! I have a 10 gallon tank where a swordtail had babies several weeks ago.
I don't remember exactly when, but the babies are mostly 3/4 inch. I want to
separate out the sexes, but I have a couple concerns. First, when can I start to
tell who is male and female? Right now, no swords are in evidence and no
gonopodiums. Second, I know that a mixed sex tank needs more females than males,
so will a tank of all males be fighting all the time? Also, the tank is looking
pretty crowded right now. I have three adult females, one female-turned-male,
ten babies, and a small panda cat. I just tested the water and found no ammonia
or nitrites, and nitrates were around 30. I was really surprised. Shouldn't that
be an overload situation?
Thanks!
Lauren
<You will not be able to sex your fry until the gonopodium forms on the males.
This will happen shortly before the sword forms. You want a high female to male
ratio to spread out the male's sexual aggression. Most males get along fine with
one another. Of course they are always exceptions to the rule. Each fish is an
individual. And your stocking seems fine for now. You will need to move out some
fry soon though. The best gauge of your stocking level is that nitrate test. If
you can go a week without a water change and still have only 30ppm of nitrate,
I'd say you're fine. 20ppm would be better though. While growing out the fry
it's best to overfeed, then do more frequent water changes to keep things in
line. Like the young of many species, the kids eat a ton and make a mess. Don>
Several questions re: Swordtail fry
I have spent the last couple of months re-establishing our 55 gallon tank
that was devastated by a temperature shock accident. The surviving fish
from the tank are an adult female marble angelfish and two swordtails,
one male and one pregnant female. We've gradually introduced new fish
including a second also pregnant female sword, four juvenile angelfish,
2 Cory cats, 2 juvenile Plecos, and about 2 dozen tetras of different
varieties. We also added some live and some fake plants and a good sized
piece of wood from the LFS.
Everyone looked great until two days ago, when I noticed that two of the
swords had a little bit of fin rot and one was flashing against things.
No sign of disease on any other fish though. Yesterday we corrected for
a very small ammonia and nitrate spike and we added salt to help with
the fin rot.
<I wonder if the wood is at root cause here? Mal-affecting water
quality... a sudden drop in pH, alkalinity would affect the Swordtails
first here of all the life you list>
We also began a course of treatment with MelaFix.
<I would not use this "remedy">
Last night I noticed the original pregnant female showing signs of
imminent delivery, so I put her in the breeding trap
and sure enough we have babies, about 30 that survived the night of
breeding trap malfunctions and forays into the main tank. They are now
in a floating isolation/breeding tank.
So here's the questions..
1. Will the water treatments, salt, or MelaFix be bad for the fry?
<Possibly>
I was hesitant to continue to use the treatment but I did today anyway
because I don't want all three of my swords suffering with fin rot if
they don't have to. I just made sure to put the floating tank on one end
of the tank and treat all the way at the other, so it would be nice and
diluted once it reached the fry. Should I keep using it or no?
<Do me a favor, and test the "drift-wood"... in a separate container...
soak it for a day or three... test the water in with it>
2. My adult angel fish (Big Mama) won't leave the floating tank alone.
She eats like normal at feeding times but she really wants those little
tasty fries. Anything to be done about her?
<Not much. Feed the fish more often, away from the trap>
3. My only other tank is another 55 gallon that is currently empty. We
just did a %100 water change and replaced the gravel, so it's a
completely fresh tank now. This is where we intend to move the fry, but
I know you shouldn't put fry into a fresh tank like that. What is the
best way to handle this and when should we move them?
<Move water change water, possibly some of the "old/er" substrate into
the new 55... wait a couple weeks...>
4. 55g is a whole lot of space for 30 fry, but it's all I have. What's
the best way to feed them in a larger tank and should we try and keep a
few other fish in the tank?
<Frequent (a few times per day) finely ground (twixt your fingers) dried
(flake, pellet) food... in the same area, routine>
Uhhh.. that about covers it I think.
Thanks.
<Thank you for writing. Bob Fenner> Several questions re:
Swordtail fry
> We also
> began a course of treatment with MelaFix.
> <I would not use this "remedy">
Well why not and what would you recommend?
<<No real consistent beneficial action. May indeed be toxic to the fry.
Would maybe use a bit of salt>>
> <Do me a favor, and test the "drift-wood"... in a
> separate container... soak it for a day or three...
> test the water in with it>
I took it out completely and replaced it with large
rocks instead.
<<Are you testing for it, their chemical activity?>>
> 2. My adult angel fish (Big Mama) won't leave the
> floating tank alone. She eats like normal at feeding
> times but she really wants those little tasty fry.
> Anything to be done about her?
> <Not much. Feed the fish more often, away from the
> trap>
She seems to have gotten over this on her own.
<<Ah, good>>
> 4. 55g is a whole lotta space for 30 fry, but it's
> all
> I have. What's the best way to feed them in a larger
> tank and should we try and keep a few other fish in
> the tank?
> <Frequent (a few times per day) finely ground (twixt
> your fingers) dried (flake, pellet) food... in the
> same area, routine>
> Uhhh.. that about covers it I think.
> Thanks.
> <Thank you for writing. Bob Fenner>
I picked up some Wardley's Smallfry liquid baby fish
food and they really really seem to like it. Still
feeding some well crushed regular and Spirulina
flakes, but they seem to really prefer the liquid
stuff. And since they are still in the floating baby
tank, most of the uneaten portion slips through the
holes into the main tank and the rest I very carefully
suck out with a clean turkey baster.
<Good technique>
I am thinking
that since they are doing so well in the floating
tank, I will just leave them in there until they are
too big, and then move them into the spare 55g. Would
it be faster to get that tank going with good water
quality if I put some small fish in there, in addition
to putting water change water in there from the
established tank? If so, what kind of fish would be
best suited to be in a tank with juvenile swords?
Thanks again.
<Better to cycle "fish-less", though this tank is large. Bob Fenner>
Swordtail Due Date
I have read thru all of the questions you all have answered but I still need
a little help. I bought a green female swordtail yesterday, looking at her
last night we realized she is pregnant. I can not see any eyes in the black
area and I am trying to figure out how long to wait before I put her in the
2 way breeder. I do not want to put her in there too soon but I certainly
don't want to miss her having the babies. Please help me. Thank you for your
time. Heather
<It's very hard to guess when a sword will drop. And it's always a guess.
Watch the black spot. It will darken and seem closer to the skin as she
nears her time. You may also notice her trying to hide from the other fish.
Don> Swordtail Due Date
There isn't an answer to my question.
<Sorry, possibly a glitch in the system. My answer is copied below. Don>
<<It's very hard to guess when a sword will drop. And it's always a
guess. Watch the black spot. It will darken and seem closer to the skin
as she nears her time. You may also notice her trying to hide from the
other fish. Don>>
Is my swordtail pregnant?
Three weeks ago I was given a tank by someone who could no longer care for
their fish. Included in the tank, along with some other fish, was a female
orange swordtail. I believe she may be pregnant even though her male
companion, a black molly, has since died. She has what appears to be a
gravid spot and is swollen; however, she has been this way since I got her.
Is she pregnant?
<Maybe, maybe not>
And if so, why hasn’t she given birth yet?
<May just look pregnant, may have given birth, eaten the young...>
Also, her behavior has changed. She used to hide in one of the coral
structures but is now floating/swimming around near the top (not dead)
(mostly between the heater and filter). I would appreciate some
help/advice.
<Please read on WWM re. Bob Fenner>
Help! My Swordtail is sick!
Hey, guys -
We need some help - my daughters' Swordtail, Beyonce, seems to be sick, and
I'm not sure what to do with her...
We've had her for about 2 months. She had babies about 2 weeks ago, and has
been acting and looking fine since then. However, this morning, she was
lying at the bottom, near the filter intake, not moving... I nudged her, and
she did move, to hide behind another item at the bottom of the tank. I put
her in the breeding net we used for her last time, so I could get a better
look at her - she seems to have lots of small, black spots on her back, as
if she were dirty. She's alive, but really lethargic...
<Good descriptions, action>
Can you give me some direction? By the way, the rest of our fish (about 20,
including 2 other Swordtails) seem to be fine, no changes. Water temp
is about 75, pH 7.2, negligible ammonia and nitrates...
Thanks for any advice.
<It may well be that this Swordtail is "just old"... the lethargy, spots
point to this... But I would try to help it by adding a bit of Epsom salt to
the tank's water (a level teaspoon per ten gallons) and not give up hope.
Bob Fenner>
Swordtails Dueling it Out
Hi there, here is the history--We bought 4 swordtails 2 males and 2 females,
the one female died within 2 weeks, now the other female is pregnant. My 2 males
seem to be getting really aggressive with one another, and I am wondering what
we should do. Is this normal??? We don't have the set up to breed right now so
we are not worried about keeping the fry but I also don't want the males to kill
each other off??? Any suggestions???
< When it comes to mating games survival goes to the fittest. If the males are
not breeding then they are attempting to drive off potential suitors. I would
add lots of plants and give the loses many places to hide and /or rest. You
could always separate them if you had another tank.-Chuck> Swordtail
died...unsure why, carbon use
Ok so about a month and a half ago I got a horrible flagellate (spelling)
infestation in my tank. Along with some fungal infection.
<Mmm, might I ask how you could tell it was these organism groups?>
I used both Maracyn 1 and 2 and Coppersafe. All by Mardel, all safe to
use together. That got rid of the fungus but not the flagellates. So I
went on to using Bowl Buddies Parasite Clear. That seemed to finally do
it. I followed all the directions and continued the treatment for as
long as it said to.
Three days ago I look in my tank and my female swordtail had egg
infested poop. It was white with 1 to 2 millimeter grayish black eggs.
I thought, crap now I have to go out and get the medication again. When
I got home from my LFS I noticed that this orangey reddish lump about 7
millimeters in diameter and 5 or 6 long with this 12 or so millimeter
thread like thing on it. I had no have no idea what it was. Before I
added the medication I went to consult my copy of Fish Diseases (the
German translated one). Mine is really old like a first edition and
didn't have anything that I could find on it. I looked through my other
books and even called the specialty fish store 2 hours away consulting
them. I found no solution.
When I went back upstairs to the tank to pondering what I should do I
noticed the thing what ever it was, was gone. It wasn't on the bottom of
the tank and wasn't anywhere. My only thought was, whatever it was its
back inside of her. I wound up just adding some salt and waited to see
if any other symptoms showed up.
<This is what I would have done as well>
None and this morning I found her dead. She was never stressed never any
loss of color none of it. My three thoughts on it were: abortion,
intestines, or her anus (to tough of a poop). I was hoping you could
help me figure out what it was/ is. I was also wondering what are the
chances it has spread to my other tanks since I use the some nets and
siphons in all my tanks.
<No clue... perhaps a biopsy, histological work-up might reveal
something...>
This is an unrelated question, but what does the charcoal do in the
filters. When I add the charcoal to them I get pH and ammonia spikes
even weeks to months later. When I just have the batting everything is
fine. Is it a necessity that I add it to the filters? I've also never
had problems with charcoal in the filters before and I have no idea what
to do about it.
<Carbons are variously effective as semi-selective filters (absorbents)
for metals, some other cations, some organic molecules... as you state,
they can significantly (and deleteriously) affect water quality... hence
they should be used in small volumes/amounts and on a regular, though
not too frequent time frame. Bob Fenner> Breeding Swordtails
Hi. I have 2 swordtails, 1 male,1 female, and I would like to know what
signs I am looking for to see if she is pregnant. Also how long I should
wait to put her in a breeder?
<The females belly will become very large and you should notice a dark
area under the tail, look closely at this area. When you see little eyes
in this area the babies are close to being born and she should be put in
the net. She should still be fed so she doesn't eat the fry.-Chuck>
Swordtail Disappearing Act?
Hi there I am new to this so I was wondering if you can help.
<<Hi, I probably can. Hopefully in time!>>
I recently purchased 5 swordtails 3 male 2 female (did not know this till I got
home). This morning all was ok, this afternoon one of the males has disappeared
without a trace.
<<Very likely driven right up OUT of the tank by one of the other males. Which,
by the way, really must be returned for another female, or things could get very
ugly for the girls.>>
The swords are the biggest fish in the tank are all males are similar in size.
Where has he gone and has he been eaten? Jim
<<Check around that tank VERY carefully - cannot stress/emphasize how easily
fish get into the smallest places. If you find him in time you might be able to
revive him. I feel he has MOST CERTAINLY been driven out of the tank. Check even
the weird places. If he just died in there you would see the other fishes
nibbling on his rotting corpse. Marina>>
Swordtails
Hi, I have a 10 gallon tank with a female and male Swordtail. I would like
to know how I could tell if they are pregnant? I am only 15 and don't know much
about fish. I have 8 other fish in my tank Pleco, 1 Chinese algae eater, 2
female fancy guppies, 2 male fancy guppies, and 2 zebras. And I would like to
know how long I should wait until I but them in a breeder?
<When pregnant the female will become very swollen and the black spot near her
anal fin will darken. It can be difficult to time the birth, but usually she
will try to hide and start to breath rapidly. The trick is to move her shortly
before these advanced signs. Watch the dark spot. You may be able to see the
fry's eyes shortly before they drop. Don> Shy Swordtail
Hello! I'm new to the fish game, learning all the time - thanks in large
part to your site! My question is about a female swordtail I bought a
couple weeks ago. I think she's pregnant, buy my question is about how
she's acting - she hides all the time! I have a large piece of coral in
my tank - she spends about 80% of her time squeezed into the nooks and
crannies. The few times that I've coaxed her out (at one point, I
thought she might have died in the coral), she
leaves the coral and goes straight into another decor item I have, and
hides there! I have one other female swordtail, a male, plus several
goldfish and 6 neon tetras. All the fish get along really well, except
for this one shy one. Is this behavior an indication that she's
pregnant? Or, is this just the way she is? Any suggestions for helping
her "come out of her shell? Thanks for your help!
Tom
<Many females will go off by themselves when ready to drop. Both she and
the fry would make an easy target for a hungry cichlid if not. Could
just be a shy fish also. The more places a shy fish as to hide, the more
it will come out. It will feel safer. The big problem I see is mixing
tropicals and goldfish. Not good. The Neons and swords want a temp in
the high 70s to low 80s. The goldfish at least ten degrees cooler. They
also do better on different diets. For the long term health of these
fish I suggest you return the goldfish. To keep several goldfish for
life requires a tank of over 150 gallons. Don>
Fry Among the Sharks
I have just got my neon swordtails 1 day ago and the female looks to be
pregnant she has green looking eyes in her belly. How long is a swordtail
pregnant? How many babies will she have? And how long should they be in a
different tank, oh and one last thing I have a 55 gallon tank with 3 Bala
sharks, 1 silvertip shark, 3 tiger barbs, 2 pink kissing Gouramis, 2 African
Auratus, 1 peacock eel, 3 rainbow sharks and 2 neon swordtails, will my
swordtails breed again in my large community tank? Thank you so much, I'm new to
this I need help. Please write me back very soon, sorry if I have asked to many
questions. Alicia.
<A healthy well kept swordtail can give birth every four to six weeks. She can
have just a few, or a large brood of 25 or more. They will have to be kept away
from the 55 until almost full grown. The adults will breed again, but little
chance of the fry making it unless removed. You have a pretty aggressive tank
there. Or it will be soon. Too many big fish for a 55. Don>
Surface-dwelling Swordtails and Sexing Tetras
Hello. I first want to thank you for the previous information. It was very
helpful. I still have the swordtail that looks pregnant. Lately (like the last
24-36 hours) she has been staying near the surface. Does this mean something?
<Livebearers have been known to hang out near the surface when they are about to
drop young. Keep an eye out.>
She eats and has regular bowel movements, but if she is starting to develop a
disease or something, I want to catch it soon. What do you suggest I do?
<Well, if she looks and acts healthy in all respects other than this abnormal
behavior, I really cannot pinpoint what (if anything) is wrong with her, as
hanging near the surface is a symptom for many things. I assume it may be due to
her pregnancy that you mentioned, but it could be a host of other causes. Low
oxygen, being bullied, disease, stress, just to name a few. I would recommend
your watching her closely, and taking action if you notice anything else out of
the ordinary.>
All the other fish in the tank swim around. The water is fine.
<When you say that the water is "fine," it is about as useless to me for
determining if your water is of concern. The readings you get from your test
kits are magical in that respect. Something could be wrong and you may not even
know about it, and it could be hidden within the readings. Don't be afraid to
send them along if you think something is wrong.>
Oh, and another thing, I have a couple of tetras. How can you tell what sex they
are and when they are pregnant?
<Depends on the tetra :-) >
I know they cannot be as easy to sex as swordtails; is there something that an
amateur, like me, can see that will
let me know if the fish is male or female? Thank you so very much!
<Again, depends on the species. Some species are sex-able, but most are not.
Check the following page for tetra species identification.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/CharaciformFishes.htm
Hope this helps, Mike G>
Swordtail fry
Hi. I just got into this fish thing and I am finding it quite enjoyable. I
have had my fish for about 2 weeks now. I bought two female swordtails that were
pregnant. One of them had five babies (I know she had more, but I think she ate
them all.) anyways, the second one popped about 3-5 days later. She had quite a
few, about 20 babies or so. She still looks pregnant, but I put her back in the
main tank because I cannot handle any more. If the babes live in the main tank,
fine, but if they do not that is fine, too.
Anyways, my question is this. I took them out of the breeder net because there
was just too many. I put them in a 1-gallon tank, no heater, but with an air
stone. They are doing great. I have not lost any, well except for the one that
stuck to the net and went down the drain, but oh well. I wish I would not have
lost him, but I could not catch him. I thought he got in the big tank. Sorry I
am blabbering here. Anyways, back to my question, how long does it take them to
mature?
<A few months... sooner with more frequent feeding, water changes...>
I do not mean an exact down to the minute answer or anything. On average, how
long does it take before they are at
least ½ an inch or so?
<A month or so>
They are right now, about 1 week old and are about 3-5 centimeters, depending on
which ones came first. They are eating well and defecating on a regular basis.
Oh yeah, the other question I had is why does my second mother still look
pregnant?
<May be still>
She had them about a week ago or so. Maybe not that long. Maybe only 3-5 days,
but the first mother does not have the dark “eyes spot” that she did when she
was pregnant. I am worried about her. I do not want to lose her. Out of the two
mommies, she was the best. I do not think she eat any of them. I am sorry about
going on like this. Feel free to edit what you need if you choose to post this.
I cannot find anything on any of the websites stating how long they will be
babies. I know not to expect them to be adults over night or anything, but I
want to know how long I have to keep them isolated. Thank you so much.
<We've got to produce some cohesive livebearer articles. Bob Fenner>
Swordtails
Thanks for the advice. I will continue to keep an eye it and I will begin to
feed all my fish some thawed frozen peas. On another note, I have a male
and a female red wag swordtail. The male, when I first bought him, was
so timid that he rarely left my Anubias plant. He slowly got more
energetic and lately I have seen him doing his mating ritual of swimming
backwards incredible fast quite a bit. His partner is obviously gravid
and he rarely leaves her side. I just added two beautiful sunset platies
(male and female) and he does not seem to like them very much. He is not
terribly aggressive, as he does not constantly chase them, but when he
does, it is usually quite violent. I noticed a nipped tail fin on the
female and I cannot quite figure out what is bothering him so much given
his previous timidity. After I saw the nipped fin, I isolated him in a
breeding net and I plan to keep him there for a few days. I have not had
much luck with this method of calming the fish down, however. Would
adding a few more female swordtails help the situation?
<A good idea... one or two more females>
If so, should I add them while he is in the net? Or, should I wait and
see if he calms down first? Thanks again for
all the useful advice! -Brody
<Mmm, either way... but likely better while the male is isolated. Bob
Fenner> Swordtail Sex Change Question
I have a breeding pair (unintentionally) of Swordtails in my 55 gal tank.
She is a Pineapple Sword and he is a Green Sword.
<Same species...>
She has had several broods where 3-4 babies would survive in the tank.
So far, they all seemed to have been females.
<Ahhh, this happens... by also Xiphophorus does "change" its
(phenotypic/apparent) sex in time>
The oldest 4 are several months old now, and I am fairly sure they all
HAD babies... now TWO of these seem to be turning into males.
<Oh, yes... I haven't woken up yet>
The once flat anal fin is turning long & narrow and they are growing
"swords" on their tails. I have read that this can happen, but
does anyone know WHY?
<Perhaps this allows for some of both sexes...>
Did they actually have babies then change sexes?
<Possibly>
Could it be because there are so many females in the tank and only one
(original) male? Will they be able to breed?
<Yes... these are likely functional males>
They are both very large, like their mother, not small and long like
"dad". Thank you for any help... (My husband thinks I am crazy!)
Bev C
<I think you are a good observer, have a curious and good mind. Bob
Fenner>
Re: My fishes... swordtail, tetra, molly
Thank you 4 answering my questions. Now I feel more confident:-)
<Good>
I'm sorry to bug you all again but I have another ?... I have 2 tinfoil tetra
( about 2 inches) and 1 gold gourami (about 2 1/2 inches). I woke up
this morning to come out to check on them and half of my gold gouramis tail is
missing. My 2 tinfoil tetras are very aggressive eaters and very fast. I
have had all three fish in the same tank 4 about 7 months now and I don't know
if the tinfoil tetra might have teamed up on the gourami and had a
bite. Do you think that the tetras might have done it? Also haw do I tell if
these fish are boys or girls.
<The tetras might be the offending party... this is definitely something that
was eaten off... And some tetras, like these are hard to discern the sex of...
but as they get older, larger, the females tend to be a little bigger, and at
times "heavier" bodied... Males have somewhat longer fins when older...>
My male swordtail has really been trying to get my female swordtail. The
female is red. If he is trying to mate and she gets pregnant how can I
tell that she is. I know that you can sometimes see the eyes of the babies but
she is so dark.
<Please read here re Swordtails:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/swordfaqs.htm
You may want to look into having another female... easier on all to not be
chased continuously>
The 2 fry swordtails are doing great. Could you tell me about how many times
I should feed them a day?
<Small amounts... about as much as they will eat in a minute... 3,4 times a day
would be okay... but twice is fine as well>
They're getting pretty fat. One of them is getting white on its belly. Do you
think that might just be his color or some type of disease?
<Just the color... it will change in time... to the rest of the body color>
And when do you think I will be able to find out if they are boy or girl? I
appreciate all of your time.
Thank u thank u thank u Kelsey Meadows.
<Only a few weeks... as you'll see. Bob Fenner>
Is my pineapple swordtail wag pregnant?
Hey! My pineapple swordtail wag female is in a tank with one other male and a
frog. They've lived together for about a month, and lately she's become
extremely fat. I was reading through the other questions, and people were
talking about the disease "dropsy" and they say the scales pop out, but hers
don't, and she's the only one that is fat. I looked for a black spot on her
belly, but she doesn't seem to have one, is she just fat or is she pregnant?
<Good observations and reporting... hard to say... are you feeding something/s
other than dried food? Do you have some "greenery" in the tank your fishes can
chew on? It may be that your Sword is pregnant... but it might just be fat as
you speculate... Best to keep an eye on her vent area... As you remark, this
area will become clearer, more transparent in appearance if she is getting close
to birthing... and you should be able to make out the young's eyes getting close
to parturition... Bob Fenner>
Swordtail with Single Spot
I have a 55 gallon tank including a bunch of swordtails (started with 2 or 3
and they bred). Some of them are finally starting to develop swords. One in
particular I noticed had a white spot where its sword was beginning to form. I
immediately thought it might be Ick, but didn't remove it right away. The next
day, the spot was almost completely gone. I wasn't sure what to think but didn't
want to expose this fish to the shock of a isolation tank if there was nothing
wrong with it, so I left him. A day or two later, I noticed the spot had
returned. Once again, a day later it was gone. During this time, the tail has
been growing steadily. Other than this spot, I have noticed nothing wrong with
the fish. Its fins are not clamped, it swims around energetically with everyone
else, there are no other spots anywhere on him, and there are no spots on any of
my other fish. I'm wondering if this isn't just a normal thing that some
swordtails do when they begin to develop their swords. Of course, if it is a
problem, I need to get him out of there quick so I appreciate your opinion.
Thank you. David
<Might have been an injury or a little dead tissue. A single spot may or may not
be Ick. Are the fish "flashing" against the bottom or rocks? If yes, or if you
see any more spots, you need to treat before it gets out of control. Use salt.
It's cheap, less stressful on the fish and 100% effective. Read here on it's
proper use to kill Ick.
http://www.aquariumadvice.com/showquestion.php?faq=2&fldAuto=32 Take
note of the life cycle and treat for two weeks after the last spot drops. But I
would hold off any treatment if that one spot is all you see. Pick up a test kit
if you treat. Watch for ammonia spikes and do water changes to correct. Don>
(Not) Pregnant Swordtail
Sorry if this has already been answered, but I have a swordtail who appears
to be pregnant, and the scales are all standing out. Happened overnight - is
this normal? Thanks so much, appreciate your help as always! Pat
<Not normal, not pregnant... Your Sword has a condition termed "dropsy". Please
put this term in the search tool on www.WetWebMedia.com and read the links. Bob
Fenner>
My Swordtails
About a week a go I bought 2 pregnant females and one male
swordtail.
<Best not to move such late pregnancy livebearers...>
Right now I have the female that is closest to their do date in a 2 1/2 gallon
tank. After the female gives birth, I am going to put her in a 2 gallon tank
for a day, and then put her in with the other swordtails. How long do I keep the
fry in the 2 1/2 gallon tank?
<Mmm, until they are too large for the fishes in my main tank to eat them...
with regular feeding, water changes... likely a month or two>
When could I put them in with the adult fish even though there is enough
cover... plants, weeds, etc.? Can you also send me an
e-mail saying how to hatch Baby Brine Shrimp (the easiest way and the less
messiest way). Send a couple because I have read about 20 different things on it
and so I would like to pick it my self
<What we have re Artemia is stored here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/artemiafaqs.htm>
Thanks Steve Young
P.S.- write me back ASAP because the fish is going to have birth one day in
between 1-6-05 and 1-15-05
<Ah, a new aquaculturist is born! Bob Fenner>
Feeding Swordtail Fry
I have a pineapple swordtail that just gave birth. I'm pretty sure that the
babies will survive for a time on their egg sacs, but what should I feed them or
how soon. I only have flake food available right now, but maybe you could
suggest something I can get for them that would be better...
Please reply soon...
Barb.
<Powdered flake is a fine food for swordtail fry. You could also hatch some baby
brine shrimp. Feed tiny amounts a few time a day for fry. The leftovers will be
lost in the gravel and decay. You should be testing your water for spikes in
ammonia. Use a gravel vac when doing water changes to keep thing clean. Young
Swords will start to eat within a day or two of birth. Most of their yolk is
used before birth. Congrats and good luck. Don>
Swordtails
Hi!
We recently got a used 55 gallon tank with a wet dry filtration system. I've
been reading up a bit from a basic aquarium book before I stock it. We've
decided we want to try the recommendation of the book of 4 angels, 5 swordtails
and 8 mixed species of Corys for the tank. I hope you guys think
this mix is good. Anyway the question is...is it necessary to have a mix of
female and male swordtails or can we just have all males?
<You can have whatever your heart desires> <<Mmm, the males will likely pester
your other fishes... RMF>> Also, we were
thinking of transferring the 5 inch pleco we have in our 5 gallon tank into
this one cause its getting a bit large for the 5 gallon.<Yes, do
that. Definitely too big for the 5 gallon.> Is that an ok
substitute for 1 or 2 of the Corys?<Sure>
Would greatly appreciate your stocking tips before we plunge headlong into
this.<What you have selected is fine> James (Salty Dog)
Thanks!
By the way, hubby already got started before I could ask you.. He got 2 male
swordtails and 2 Corys already.
Ophelia
Swordtails
Hello Ophelia. <Geez, don't know where the "Hell Ophelia came from. Hope I
didn't do that. Sounds like the "o" is missing from hello. I've been
experiencing a problem with my computer and its quite possible that as I started
to answer it did it's thing again. Sorry.>
Hell Ophelia??? What kind of reply is that? Or am I missing something from
your reply?
I have been to your site and I couldn't find anything about ALL MALE swordtails
in a tank, I also perused the FAQs. that's why I thought I'd ask
you directly.<Keeping all males is a matter of preference and is probably the
reason you wouldn't find anything on the WWM site. James (Salty Dog)
Livebearer sex change
I placed five grown females into a community tank,
> and a month later have four females and a male? Do
> they morph if no males are available?
> <Hee hee... females, males of what? swordtails
<Actually, yes.... this and other livebearing toothed carps (poeciliids) can/do
change their sex in events of disproportionality, need. Bob Fenner>
Strange Swordtail Behavior -Old or Sick?
Hi there,
Sorry to bother you but I am hoping you can help. We have a mixed 15gal tank
including some swordtails tetras and two clown loaches. Recently
the oldest of the swordtail females - (we have had her over a year and she is at
least three inches long & full grown when we got her) -
She has started acting very strangely and stopped eating. All the other fish in
the tank look fine and eat and swim normally. This one swims
"frantically" around near the surface of the water with the top of her head just
barely brushing the surface. I have not seen her eat anything
for at least a week. She has gotten very thin, but continues to swim despite
apparent exhaustion which occasionally has her drift to the
bottom for a "rest" period. She then returns to the surface and sticks her nose
toward the air again.
We have both an internal Eheim filter (we live in the Netherlands so you may not
know these brands) as well as some extra aeration via a bubble
wand since the internal filter doesn't aerate. We have done two 25%-30% water
changes in the last two weeks in case it was a water quality
issue. We have also tried treating with a locally available "broad spectrum"
product "Exit" that claimed (in Dutch) to cure "most common fish ailments.
So if this is not simply old age. apparently it is an Uncommon ailment. I would
like to know if this sounds like anything remotely curable. She
just keeps getting skinnier and skinnier and she was so strong to last this
long, but she is simply getting worse not better, but doesn't seem
to want to die of old age....Any ideas?
Thanks for any input!
Laura
< It sounds like an internal bacterial infection that may have been drought on
by advanced age. In a clean warm quarantine tank I would try Metronidazole or a
heavy dose of Furanace. You fish has been ill/weak for a while so it may not be
strong enough for a triple dose of Furanace. So try a single dose and see if
there is any effect.-Chuck>
Velvet swordtail wag
How do you care for these kind of fish? I would appreciate any information.
Thank you
Cathy
<Cathy, look here:
http://www.fishbase.org/Summary/SpeciesSummary.cfm?ID=3231&genusname=Xiphophorus&speciesname=hellerii Fishbase
is an excellent resource. Jorie>
Popping Swords
how can I tell when my female swordtail fish are about to give birth
< They are usually swollen in the belly region with a dark blotch towards the
back half of the belly.>
I only had one of them 1 day and I saw lots of little fish in the tank took me
11/2 hours to catch them so you have probably guessed I didn't see how was the
1 but the look like them and now both females are large and have dark coloured
bellies it has been 3 1/2 weeks now I have put both fish in plastic breeder how
long can I leave them in there for hope you can help many thanks Kristy
< There is no exact science on when a female is ready to give birth. If the back
half of the belly develops that dark area by the back of the belly it is usually
the eyes developing from the fry so this is a sign that the birth will come
soon. Put them in a breeder net and raise the temp to 80 F and you should have
some results in about a week.-Chuck>
Swords without Tails
My pregnant swordtail has been in the floating breeding trap for a week (she had
been pregnant for 4-5 weeks prior to this). <A little long> She seemed quite
happy in there and not unduly distressed. However tonight I noticed about 50
dead fry on the bottom of the tank. Most you cannot see a tail on them so I can
only presume are malformed. Water quality is ok on testing, what have I done
wrong we have no live fry !!
Please help
Gill Smith
<First, please post the numbers from any testing. All I have to go on is waters
ok, 50 dead fry, and no tails on most, but I assume not all. Could be caused by
stress, water quality (ph, hardness, salt level etc.) or be genetic in nature.
If we eliminate the environmental factors of stress and water, as you seem to
do, we're left with genetic. If that's the problem, mating her to a different
male may help. Two problems with that. Females can use the sperm from one mating
for a few batches of fry. Plus, any young from her would carry the defective
gene as a recessive trait. It may pop back up in any future generations. A good
breeder would not continue this bloodline. But again, there are many other
reasons that may have caused her to abort. Infection is also a possible cause.
Don>
Pregger Sword
My swordtail is pregnant for the second time. The first time 2 fry survived
and were growing happily hiding in the bushes until one day they got too brave
and ventured out and presumably got eaten, as they disappeared !However she is
huge again and definitely pregnant so 3 days ago we put her into a floating
breeding trap where she is "sitting " quite happily but no fry yet ! How long
should we hold her in there if she has not produced . Also there is nothing in
the breeding trap other than water ! How long should the fry remain in there
after they are born and should I be putting anything in the bottom of the trap
??
< Sometimes breeders put some plastic foliage in the bottom of the trap to
attract the fry. If she looks very pregnant then I would leave her in there
until she gave birth. After the fry are born they should be moved to a small
aquarium of their own. Grow them up until they are too big to be eaten by the
parents.-Chuck>
Thank you in anticipation
Gill
My pregnant swordtail
Hi bob <Don here today> could you tell me how long it takes a female to give
birth once she
becomes pregnant? thanks
Most live bearers will drop fry every three to six weeks.
Swordtail pregnancy
Hello I'm emailing because I have a female swordtail that is pregnant, I
learned this from reading others peoples questions to you and the answers you
gave,
I was wondering if you could email me at this address _XXXX@aol.com_
(@aol.com) telling me how long it takes for a female to
give birth as my female has now been clearly pregnant for at least a month
could you tell me how long it usually takes for a female swordtail to give
birth from conception to delivery. <Take a look here
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/livebearers.htm, Personally I have
found that their belly starts to square off as they are about to deliver and
looses that more round appearance. MacL > Thank you very much. <Good luck>
Swordtail babies
hi, my name is matt, <Hi Matt, MacL here with you tonight> I'm new to
aquariums, and I have some questions about my pregnant swordtail... I know
nothing about breeding, my g/f just thought it would be cool to have little fish
babies. I have gotten some facts from a fish expert at Wal-mart and she said
that I should look for the black sac holding the babies(livebearing) to come to
a point at the top. <Its more like the body squares off and they have the
babies.> I thought I noticed it coming to a point, and so I put it into a
breeders net and have been watching it, it looks like the sac is starting to
shrink?? but I haven't seen any babies running around? <Sad to say sometimes the
parents will eat the babies.> what do I look for? and how should I handle
this.... I just found your website today, so do you send these answers to our
e-mails?? <We send answers back to the email address and then post them later.>
because I wouldn't know how to check what you wrote back??
Thanks Matt
A female swordtail with dropsy
Hey, I have another question regarding a large 80 gallon freshwater tank that
was sold to me full of fish for $100 because they couldn't afford it anymore. It
has a 17 and a half inch long red belly pacu, two Bala sharks (one nine inches
and the other six) four five inch silver dollars, a couple of 2.5 inch Cory
cats, a full grown giant gourami, a full grown Plecostomus, and an 8 inch Jack
Dempsey. There were some injuries during the move that were unavoidable, the
worst of witch happened to the silver dollars. We had them in a five gallon
bucket and under all the stress they just beat the crap out of each other. They
have flesh missing on their heads, fins missing here and there, and their eyes
were injured and look like they have cataracts on them also, I think they may
have hole in the head disease due to some large gaps above their eyes. I didn't
know they could be that aggressive and to tell you the truth it wasn't my idea
to put them in the bucket. I've been treating them with wide spectrum
antibiotics to avoid any diseases, but I think one of them still got infected
slightly. Is there anything I can really do about it?
< Keep the water clean and use a water conditioner that contains additives for
wound control.>
Perhaps a more specific medicine, or a dose of Epsom salt?
< Fishes from South America such as your Corys , Plecos and silver dollars
really don't like any salt added to the water. If you see specific infections
the I prefer to treat with Nitrofurazone drugs.>
's the most effective way to get rid of the hole in the head disease? They're
beautiful fish, and they are still active and feeding. Please help!
< Characins such as your silver dollars don't get hole in the head. That disease
really likes to pick on cichlids. I suspect that what you are seeing is actually
wounds from the rough transport so treat as if they were wounds.-Chuck>
How to tell if my neon swordtail is pregnant
Pregnant livebearers usually are swollen and have a darkened area near the
ventral region. These are the eyes of the fry.-Chuck>
A female swordtail with dropsy
Hey Bob, I have a female orange swordtail that got pregnant. But then she came
down with a case of dropsy, she's bloated and her scales are sticking out. I'm
kinda new to these fish, but I did a little bit of research using your site
(very helpful by the way) to find out that I need Furan compounds to cure her,
but when I got to the pet store sites, I can't figure out where to get it. Can
you please give me a suggestion? Thanks a bunch. Oh and also, another pineapple
swordtail in the same tank got pregnant also and gave birth very successfully
about two weeks ago, she had about sixty of them and so far the death toll has
only been five! Thanks again!
< Dropsy or bloat is caused by stress. Water too hot, too cold, too dirty etc...
Do a 30%v water change and clean the filter. I would recommend treating with
Metronidazole and try that first. Look at the ingredients for the medications
sold at the stores. They may have it under some commercial name. Nitrofurazone
is sold under a few different names just check the ingredients once
again.-Chuck.
Aggressive female swordtail 5/31/04
I have a couple of swordtails, (1 male and 1 female). The female (who is
larger a bit than the mail) is really aggressive. they were ok the first couple
of day after I got them, but now the male is always hiding, and every time he
goes out the female attacks him so he goes back to hiding. what does that mean??
<either the honeymoon is over, or the beer has run out <G>. But seriously, it
sounds like a simple case of territorial aggression. If the tank is not
overstocked, do consider adding more leafy coverage/plants (plastic or live), or
perhaps rearranging what you have if plentiful already. Best of luck, Anthony>
How many in a 30g?
I have recently come across a problem with my 30 gal. tank. I have a pair of
neon swordtails that gave birth
to babies last October. I had a lot of friends want some babies, so I saved them
from being eaten by their
mother. 7 months later, every single one of my friends is "unable to take them."
Now, I've grown too attached
to them and don't know what I can do. I want to keep as many as I can. I
originally kept 6 of them to be in
the main display, so along with the other fish I have, that makes 10 total. What
is the maximum I can keep
w/o overloading my bio-filter? I have an AquaClear 200 along with a 2 inch
substrate of fluorite and a few
plants. Weekly water changes of 4 gallons or RO/DI water. Thank you very much.
~Ed
<<Dear Ed, you can use a nitrate test kit to determine your stocking capacity.
Simply test your 30g on a weekly basis. Let's say you want to aim for 20ppm of
nitrates. Let's say you just did a water change, you test the tank, it's 20ppm.
You wait one week, and test again. Is the level now at 40ppm or higher? That
will mean you need to do weekly 50% water changes to keep the level at 20ppm. If
you can't keep the nitrates low, say around 20-30ppm with a weekly water change,
then you have too many fish. Simple enough. If the nitrates creep too high, you
will find yourself doing larger volume and more frequent water changes. It is
basically up to you to decide how often you want to do the tank maintenance. If
once a week water changes is okay, then stock the amount of fish that the test
kit says to. If you prefer once every three weeks, then cut down on the stocking
level until you can let the tank go for three weeks without the nitrates
skyrocketing. Make sense? -Gwen>>
How Many in a 30g II
Gwen,
Thank you very much for your quick reply. Now, assuming that the nitrate
levels will remain stable and my biofilter can handle this many fish (right now
there are 22 babies with the 4 original fish), what about over-crowding? Is this
where the 1 inch of fish/gal comes into play? ~Ed
<<Ed, the one inch per gallon is just a generalization we give to people, kinda
like the rule for changing your car's oil every 6 months. I personally hate this
rule, since it totally depends on how many fish are in what size tank, what
species they are, etc. Unfortunately, the one inch per gallon rule is quite
easily broken. With goldfish, cichlids, marine fish, for example, you simply
cannot use that rule. Goldfish produce too much waste and grow too large,
cichlids are territorial, marine fish require excellent water quality and any
level of nitrate is too high for them...so basically, the BEST way to tell your
stocking level is to test your nitrates on a regular basis. Any other method is
simply not going to cut it in the long run. Because your nitrates may NOT remain
stable, especially as your fry grow, so testing is the ONLY way to know what the
level is and therefore, how often you will need to do a water change. Let's say
you do a water change every time your nitrate level hits 40ppm. That could
happen after three days, or three weeks...depends on how many fish are in the
tank and how fast they are growing. If you are tired of doing water changes
every three days, remove some fish! Your biofilter should be able to take care
of any reasonable amount of fish, given time. Adding too many large fish at once
to a stable system can even cause ammonia spikes, so be careful. -Gwen>>
Swordtail Strangeness
Last Friday, I bought 3 female swordtails. I'm not positive what variety
they are; two are sort of goldish colored and the other is orange with
black fins that are tipped in yellow (really pretty!). Well, in the LFS,
the orange one had some black spots on his head. I asked the girl
working if those were normal and she said yes. I honestly didn't have a
clue so I just trusted her. It was the only female of the variety left
so I didn't have much choice. Well, I got home and quarantined all three
in the same tank (10 gallon, Whisper filter, 78 degrees F, 50% water
from main tank, 50% treated tap water). Several hours later when I
checked to see how they were doing, the black spots were gone! So what
does this mean? Is she sick? Was she sick? Should I quarantine them
longer than I'm planning (1 more week)? Ever heard of anything like
this? All three of them seem very healthy right now and those spots have
never come back. Thanks for any help you can provide. David
<<David, I have no clue. The only thing I can think of is a color change due to
stress, so the black spots could return. Although platies rarely change color
due to stress, but I guess it's possible. I can't think of any other reason for
the spots to disappear so quickly. Quarantine them for a couple of weeks. At any
rate, keep an eye on your fish for any other physical changes, and test your
water regularly for ammonia, nitrite, and nitrates. Good luck! -Gwen>>
Swordtail Abortion
A Big hello from Australia to everyone...
And thank you for taking the time to read this.
I have been reading your site and searching for a reason as to why my
pregnant Lyretail Swordtail aborted her pregnancy 2 days after being put in
the breeding trap. We have a breeding trap designed to hold 2 females about
6" long and into this 2 days ago we put the two pregnant Swordtails, 1
pineapple and one Lyretail. We come home today to find the female Lyretail a
lot thinner and about 50 eggs on the bottom of the breeding trap with 1 live
healthy baby and 1 not so healthy looking baby, which still has the yolk of
it's egg attached. I have head of Platy's aborting their pregnancy, but not
Swords... As I'm really eager to breed the pair of lyre tails, could you
please shed some light on this?
Thanking you in Advance. Justin
>>Dear Justin; My guess would be stress. Many animals will prematurely abort
when highly stressed. I recommend testing your water (which is always the first
thing to do) for ammonia, nitrite, and nitrates. Your ammonia and nitrite should
be 0, nitrate should be kept low, around 30-60ppm is a good level. If the tank
is a relatively new set-up, or if you have over-cleaned your filtration, you may
be experiencing an ammonia/nitrite spike. How often do you do partial water
changes? Also, next time you could try using one trap per female.. -Gwen<<
Dying Female swords
Hi! I'm from Illinois. I've had 4 very pregnant neon swordtails die with out
giving birth. They were in different community tanks at different times, so I
can't blame one tank. I have eight more that pregnant swords, am I doing
something wrong. They weren't in breeding cages. Thank You, Pat
<<Hello Pat; yes, there are things you can do to help your swordtails. First is
always to make sure the water quality is good. Good meaning low nitrate levels,
zero ammonia and nitrites. If you don't own test kits, I recommend you buy some
at your LFS. Test your water and keep logs of each weekly reading. Each tank is
probably stocked a bit differently, so you will need to keep track of each tank
separately in order to figure out which tank needs how many water changes per
month/week. Next is to make sure you are feeding your fish proper nutrition. Do
not overfeed! Females should have a high protein diet, supplemented with algae
based foods. In other words, a balanced diet. Buy high quality foods, and feed
interchangeably. They should be getting a good flake or pellet as a staple, with
a protein content of 50%. Read the labels! Tetra Colorbits are a good choice.
Also, get a good Spirulina based flake (make sure Spirulina is the first
ingredient listed) and a few times a week you can also give frozen bloodworms,
brine shrimp, glassworms, etc etc.. Last by not least, make sure the females
outnumber the males, three to one is good odds. They should have places to hide
so the males cannot constantly harass the exhausted females. A heavily planted
tank works well, either real or fake plants will do. Good luck! -Gwen>>
Dying Female Swords II
Thanks for your reply Gwen, Thanks for all your suggestions. I have always
checked everything you mentioned. The only thing is I probably didn't have
enough females at those times. I had a batch of a lot of males and then some
late developers into males. Thank You, Pat
<<Hey Pat; good to hear. The problem with too many males is they tend to run the
females literally to the point of exhaustion. Adding some more females will
help. And yes, make sure you are not adding more juvenile males :P
-Gwen>>
Deformed Swordtail Fry (12/21/2003)
Dear crew,
My female swordtail gave birth in a breeding trap but some of them got out and
eaten. Now I have 7 left. 3 of them are swimming normally but the other 4 have
crooked backs (crooked in the shapes of 'L', 'S' and 'Z') but are still alive.
They swim on their heads spirally. I've waited for them to hopefully change
since 10.30am until now (5.30pm) but they're still crooked. Is it a deformity?
<Sure sounds like a birth defect to me. My LFS recently told me that the quality
of FW livebearers seems to be going down due to diminished genetic diversity.
More defects. I've heard/read the same about angels. Some livebearers are even
intentionally bred for abnormal shapes (bulging bellies & bent spines. I've seen
these at Petco. IMO it's wrong to deliberately breed fish to have these
abnormal, often disabling shapes.>
Will they live? <Hard to say. Their deformities are obviously making it hard for
them to get around. Yet if they can manage to eat, they may live/thrive. Let us
know how it goes.>
Please e-mail me an answer at XXXX@XXXXXXXX Thank you so much.
<Hope this helps, Steve Allen>
Angelfish 'n Platies
Crew,
I read the post & Sabrina's reply to the reader with an impressive
collection of FW fish in a 58G tank.
<Say my name, and magically I appear! Sabrina with you, today>
Among the multitude of fish in the tank were angels and platies and swordfish.
Over the years, I have never had much luck keeping angels and platies/swordtails
thriving in the same tank. My daughters have taken over the FW in our house now
that I have moved to SW. My 10 y/o wants an angel and a swordfish, but I have
resisted so far.
<One swordtail wouldn't be a very happy fish - they really like/need to
school. Two females (or more) per every one male. At that, one angel wouldn't
make for a very happy critter, either, I'm afraid - and angels will eat baby
swordtails, so don't plan on raising many. On top of that, two angels in a tank
will likely try to breed, and will turn aggressive to their tankmates. I prefer
to see angels in larger tanks where they can have space needed to establish
territory if they do breed (at the least, a 55 gallon tank, IMO, to try to have
other fish with them).>
Am I correct in my understanding that their optimal pH and hardness ranges are
different enough that it is difficult to keep them together?
<I wouldn't think so; platies, swords, and angels have been bred in captivity
long enough that they can tolerate a very wide range of pH and hardness. Angels
will tolerate pH much lower than the platies and swords, and the platies and
swords can go with a much harder, alkaline water than the angels. Platies and
swords can even go brackish. But I definitely think there's enough neutral
ground to keep them together (as long as you're not dealing with wild stock).>
Also, the fish guy at the local Petco tells me that the hardiness and general
health of the swords and platies available at retail had been going down in the
past few years, probably from genetic problems.
<Likely true. The same can be said for guppies and mollies, as well, I would
think. Too much selective inbreeding without taking care to add in fresh
genes.>
I've been hearing similar concerns about angels recently - too much inbreeding
for certain desirable traits leading to problems with other genes.
<Exactly. I've even seen in stores in the last couple of years angels with very
significant deformities - missing or malformed fins, malformed heads, etc. If
possible, try to get angels from good, reputable breeders instead of from stores
where some of the angels exhibit deformities.>
Thanks, Steve
To Breed or Not to Breed
Hello there.
<Hey>
I have 2 female and 1 male swords. My question is do I need the male?
<Not really.>
Both females have already had fry and I'm not in any hurry to have anymore. I
only have a 20 gallon and 40 babies. Way too many for me to take proper care
of. I'm a beginner. Thank you.
<Your local fish store will probably take the extra babies off your hands. If
you do not want more babies I would separate the males and the females, babies
too, they will not take long to grow up. -Gage>
Swordtail Breeding
>Hi, if I put a pregnant swordtail in a ten gallon breeding tank just like
normal with only rocks in the bottom and the filter and heater, could you walk
me through her having the babies what kind of plants I will need or peat moss
like we talked earlier about and if I need a breeding net or a tank divider and
everything else I should know? thank you sooooo much!
>>Sure, Loyd, I'll do my best, although you'll soon discover that these things
are far too much like rabbits and lemmings in their breeding propensities! Set
up the little tank, you can use the plastic grass as I've mentioned to let the
babies hide, or you can get a special container with a v-shaped bottom that lets
the babies drop to the bottom and out of mother's reach. Filtration is best
kept at its simplest, I like a basic old-fashioned air-driven sponge
filter. Set it up in the main tank first so it becomes inhabited with
nitrifying bacteria, and once it's really going it can also provide food to the
babies. They can also be fed a special "fish baby food" that you can find at
most shops quite easily, or you can finely grind regular flake food. Be careful
to cull, or you'll end up with FAR more than you'll know what to do with! Have
fun! Marina
Swordtails
What does it mean when a male nibbles at the female swordtails ventral
area?<could be a mating ritual or just aggression...I would keep an eye on the
two and see if the female is getting hurt or stressed out. If the latter occurs
I would put the female in a breeding net> Is he trying 2 kill her unborn babies
in an attempt 2 mate w/ her?!! <doubtful-but would keep a close eye on the fish,
IanB>
Pineapple swordtail
I just bought a pineapple swordtail fish and her belly is large and we can
see what we think is eyes or little black dots. We have her in a breeding tank
right now and we are wondering how long it usually takes for them to have their
babies. We also have another female that we believe is pregnant and we don't
really know if she is or not her belly is large but it is black. If you can
answer these two questions ASAP that would be great thanks.
<Both of them are probably pregnant. The gestation period should be about 30
days. You're welcome! Ronni>
Salt Compatibility
Hi crew
<Greetings>
I have some questions to ask...I have a female velvet swordtail and the
coloration on her mouth alone is white. Since the rest of her is a very rich
dark orange color, it is very easy to spot this white patch. It also looks a
little flaky. I also observed that a long almost transparent piece of stuff was
coming out of her backside. Normally their feces is the color of the food they
eat, so this looked quite strange. She is fatter than usual, so I assume she
might be pregnant. Is this transparent stuff the beginning of her delivery
possibly? And what is the stuff around her mouth.
<She most likely is pregnant but the transparent feces and the white mouth are
symptoms of a disease. Please read
http://www/wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfshparasites.htm for more info.>
My last question involves the use of aquarium salt. I have a little pleco, a
Pimelodelid catfish, a Betta, 2 swordtails, 2 guppies, 2 Corys, and 3 zebra
Danios who all get along peacefully. Are all these fish salt compatible?
<You’ll need to do some research on these fish to find out their compatibility
with salt. Do a search for each fish at
http://www.wetwebmedia.com.
http://www.fishbase.org also has a ton of info. You can also use your favorite
search engine to search the web.>
Thanks for your time. J.P. Luque
<You're welcome. Ronni>
Sword Tail and her babies
<Ananda here answering the freshwater fish questions today...>
Hello I have a green sword tail who just delivered babies I am not sure if she
is done but babies and mother are doing well I have them in a separate small
tank. My question is how long should I keep the mother in the tank with them. I
do have breeding grass in the tank and she doesn't seem to be going after them.
But I would like to put her back with the other fish. Any help would be
appreciated.
Thank You, Marlin
<I like to keep the new mothers away from the rest of the fish for a little
while. You've done that, so she could go back in the main tank any time.
--Ananda>
Pregnant Swordfish
I have 2 female and 1 male swordfishes. Both of my females are pregnant. One of
my female swordtails are almost due to have her babies (maybe in a couple of
days). I was just wondering, is there anyway I can make her deliver the fry any
earlier without a problem.
<Not really, you should let nature take its course here.>
My water temperature is about 80 F and 27 C. My PH level is about 7.6.And one
more question: all of them has Ich (I've been treating it for two days now) will
that stop my pregnant female from having her babies
sooner?
<The Ich is my main concern here, if cured the platies will spawn again in the
future, if not cured they will die. Ich is usually brought on by environmental
stressors, temperature changes, poor water quality, poor diet, etc. I would
focus on getting rid of the Ich, and trying to identify anything that may have
caused the outbreak. Please read the article at the link below.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/AqBizSubWebIndex/fishdisho.htm
Thanks. Please reply soon as possible because I am going out of town.
<Best of luck, and have a safe trip. -Gage>
My female swordtail, Baby Story?
I had a question about my female swordtail. The guy at the store said she
was def. pregnant well I put her in a separate tank, from the others now all she
does is lie on the bottom like she is dead. I have tried poking her to make her
move but she just lays there she is very fat and has the black spot like she is
pregnant can you help me out or not? Thank you, Kerri
<Well, Kerri- It is normal for a fish in late pregnancy to have some difficulty
in moving. However, if she is not moving at all, it can be a bad sign. Ask
yourself a few questions. First, is she breathing rapidly? Does she have any
outward signs of disease? Scales standing out, obvious marks on her body, etc?
How are the water conditions in the 'maternity ward?" If they are dramatically
different than your main tank, this could be a form of shock. How long has she
been immobile?
Don't panic, but ask yourself these questions, and be prepared to take action if
needed, such as water changes. Keep an eye on her. Hopefully, by the time you
get this, she'll be a new mom! Let us know if you have any more problems. Hang
in there! Scott F.>
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