Discus Fish

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Discus Breeding

Friday, May 15th, 2009

To breed the Discus Fish, a bare bottom tall 20 or 27 gallon tank is best. A vertical surface for them to deposit their eggs on is best because discus lay their eggs just like angels. If so desired, a potted plant or two can be added to the breeding tank. This will provide shelter for the pair, but this isn’t critical. An outside power filter should be used to pick up an debris in conjunction with a sponge filter for the biological waste.

Discus come from the warm, soft, acidic waters of the Amazon River so naturally they’ll thrive if these conditions are replicated in home aquariums. The ideal conditions for breeding of discus are: the pH at 6.5 and the temperature at 86 F. if alterations need to be made to the water chemistry it should be done prior to the water being added to the tank.  Water changes should be done weekly for general maintenance, however a small water change should be done every day, or, at least, every second day. Frequent water changes increase appetite and promote mating activity in discus. This is why discus will often spawn shortly after a water change.

Good water quality must be maintained if the discus are to have large appetites.  Spawning discus should be fed frozen blood worms, frozen or live brine shrimp, Tetra Color Bits, live white worms or beef hearts.  Care must be taken with beef heart to make sure nothing is left over because it will quickly foul the water. Never feed tubifex or black worms to discus at any time, as they will introduce parasites into the tank.

A breeding pair will lay eggs as often as every week and as many as fifteen times. They will usually go through two spawning cycles a year. The eggs are free-swimming and take about 48 hours to hatch. Upon becoming free-swimming the fry will move to their parents’ sides, and start feeding off the mucous secretion that are produced by the parents during this time. The fry will feed off their parents’ sides for as long as you leave them together, but newly hatched brine shrimp should be offered after being free-swimming for five days.

Remove fry between two and three weeks after reaching the free-swimming stage. If left in with parents the fry will start ripping off scales and bits of flesh from the parents. The parents will spawn shortly after fry are removed. Put the fry in a tank of their own and feed them six or more times a day. Newly hatched brine shrimp and chopped blood worms are the best food. The first few weeks there will be noticeable daily growth. Be sure to do a partial water change every night after the last feeding in the fry tank.

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freshwater discus fish in 95 gallon tank

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Discus fish

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Something's wrong with my Aquarium fish!?

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

When i bought my fish, they were all fine and healthy. I gave some to my brother-in-law, which several of them died soon after wards, he took very poor car of them.

They were half or fully blind, but i "healed" them, until they seem completely normal: swimming well, healthy diet, no white gunk on the eyes.

But when i mixed it into my bigger aquarium, about 6-7 feet long, at first they appeared just fine. Then they began developing these weird black dots? It looks like someone took a black/grey gel pen and started to make dots between their eyes and to above their mouth.

Then they start having trouble swimming, and some of them is so bad with the disease they just sink onto the sand. When they try to swim, they look like something is pushing them back, like a human wobbling almost.

I have 4 Pleco's around 4 inches big now, they are fine, my angel fish bought on the same day are fine (5 of them), it's just my Discus fish! i have 15 of them, and 5 of them have the disease heavily, and 2 of them started to get spots on their face!

The common symptoms:

-Rapid breathing
-Black/Grey Specks between eyes (commonly on face)
-Trouble swimming
-Trouble Eating

It's spreading! i don't know what disease it is, it doesn't match anything on the websites.

I love my fish :( please tell me what's wrong with them?

My eldest Discus is about 5 years old, i take great care of them, but i don't know what's wrong! I know it's not my aquarium tank, it has an amazing filter, it was suitable hiding spots, there is no water worms, no parasites, nothing! And it can't be the food, i've been feeding them the same product ever since i bought the fish!

Please help me.

"-Rapid breathing
-Black/Grey Specks between eyes (commonly on face)
-Trouble swimming
-Trouble Eating"

All these symptoms make me think that you are dealing with an excess ammonia problem. Ammonia will lower the oxygen in your tank. It also makes your fish listless and not hungry. It will burn your fish's body which can explain all the dark spots you see.

How big is your tank in gallons? I suggest you perform a 40 % water change and see what happens. Also do some research online on the type of fish you own and their space requirements. Remember that some fish might need a bigger tank as adults. Get a test kit to see if the ammonia levels in your tank are safe….

110 Gallon Discus Aquarium

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

My new 110 gallon ‘extra high’ aquarium, now home to eight discus and other supporting fish. Lighting in video is 130 watts of 10000K compact fluorescent.

Fish list:
4 Flachen Discus (4″, Stendker)
4 Red Scriblet Discus (2.5″, Stendker)
5 Schwartzi Corydoras
1 Flying Fox Algae Eater

Plants:
Java Fern (Microsorum pteropus)
Italian Vallisneria (Vallisneria spiralis)
Narrow-leaf Temple (Hygrophila corymbosa)

Background music is ‘Fishtro’, by Purple Motion of Future Crew.

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Young discus fish in aquarium tank

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Feeding young discus fish,
12 jun 2009,
29 celcius water,
3x L144,
5x discus (7 cm – 10 cm)
Brilliant turquoise,
Red turquoise,
Blue diamond,
Pigeon blood,
Marlboro red,

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Where is a good place for Aquariums and Aquarium Fish in Abu Dhabi or Dubai?

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Hi all, I have recently moved to Abu Dhabi and am looking to start a (simple) planted aquarium.

I have no particular problem finding equipment (although eheim/haagen/fluval/aquaclear seems to be completely absent from the market) I am mainly concerned about getting good Freshwater stock – Rams, Angelfish, Discus, Gouramis, etc.

Any advice is greatly appreciated~!

National Aquarium
Dubai
Tel : 04-3420877
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Jassina Fish Aquarium
Dubai
Tel : 04-2691665
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Azoo Aquarium & Gifts Trading LLC
Dubai
Tel : 04-3443073
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Al Ameera Aquarium & Pets
Ground Floor, Baytona Building, Old Mazda Road, Tourist Club Area, Abu Dhabi
Landmark : Opposite Fayrouz Supermarket
Tel : 02-6747767
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Aquarium Centre
Abu Dhabi
Tel : 02-6217373

Discus Aquarium Fish ( Greece Chios )

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

A Nice Aquarium Video with Discus Fishes Tha Own a Friend OF mine. Enjoy It

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how much co2 should I put in a planted discus aquarium (tank)?

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

I have a 250 gallon aquarium that is planted with swords, long grass, and some other plants. I also have discus, tetras, clown loaches, pleco, and siam algae eaters. I want to know how much co2 I should put in to help my plants grow and not hurt my fish. Also I have long stringy algae growing if I increase the co2 levels will that help it go away. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.

Holy crap that's a big tank…….nice

CO2 can be tons of fun but get your wallet for a couple hundred bucks.

A tank that big you can either dose with seachem excel. Its the organic version of CO2. Cheap, known to clear up algae problems and gives the plants a source of CO2.

By far cheaper than pressurised CO2 your only other choice.

Aswell respect excel dosage rules, you need to be accurate with this stuff.

Pressurised is tons of fun but money.

It works, you regulate it (full control) and the results will be there.

A DIY for that tank would be totally unreasonalble, you have no control (it flucuates)and you would need to do about 5-8 2 litre bottles a week and a really good diffuser.

Plus no surface agigtation..any and the CO2 escapes before the plants can use it. Excel…does not have this problem

what a pain.

with pressurized you can control dosage for loss etc…

Here is an algae guide for you

http://theplantedtank.co.uk/algae.htm

Just now this…before you decide.

Lights is the plants gas pedal..low light means low need for CO2 (its food). Ferts are like plant vitamins.

so low light means low need for co2, increase the co2 beyond there need and its awaste and chokes out fish.

so adding one with the others is pontless, plants are all about balance.

I would try excel and dose tank with a an all purpose fert like seachem flourish. But dose lightly if low light tank.

see if this helps first

good luck!!!!

Happy Discus in planted aquarium

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

they got better, not sick anymore :) and plants are growing like crazy

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Discus Fish – The King of all Aquarium Fish

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

The Discus is called KING OF AQUARIUM FISH Why? What is it about Discus, that makes it so special? Discus is the only species of fish that is born with the ability to excrete food in the form of mucus from whole body to feed their young, quite similar to our human breast feeding. In human only mother can produce milk where as in Discus both parents can produce this food for their babies. This makes Discus the only living thing in this world gifted with this unique capability.

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