Discus Fish

All About Discus Fish

Archive for the ‘Green Discus Fish’ Category

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.

For more information click here for Discus Fish Secrets

Technorati Tags: ,

discus swimming but with glare

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

red turk, red dragon, blue turq, circle leapord, mozaic leapord, ocean green

Duration : 0:0:56

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , ,

My tank in different setups – Red Severum, Green Terror, Clown Loaches, and more!

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

My tank in some different setups, let me know which one you prefer!

If you liked this song, visit Antoine Dufour’s YouTube page and have a listen!

Red Severum – 5″
Green Terror – 3.5″
5x Clown Loaches – 1.5″
A few Flying Foxes – 1″
Plec (you can’t see it) – 6″
Black Ghost Knife Fish – 4″

3x Discus – 3″
Red Tailed Shark – 3″

Thanks…

Duration : 0:3:11

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Wild Discus: RSG and Alenquer

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

My Wild Discus

Duration : 0:1:43

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

25lb Box of Decorative Natural Green Slate Aquarium Rock

Friday, June 19th, 2009

25lb Box of Decorative Natural Green Slate Aquarium Rock

Natural Green Slate Natural Green Slate rock, excellent for almost any type of aquarium, terrarium, or reptile tank, or for use in arts, crafts, or home decor. Safe for both fresh and saltwater aquariums. Great for fish that like to lay eggs on a flat surface such as Discus, Angelfish, Catfish,

(more…)

Red Spotted Green

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Red Spotted Green discus

Duration : 0:0:48

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

discus swimming

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

red turk, blue turq, red dragon, circle leapord, mozaic leapord, ocean green

Duration : 0:0:28

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Discus, Wild Green Blue Diamond F1

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

pair about to spawn

Duration : 0:1:55

(more…)

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

in my aquarium my anubias is wilting any reasons why ?

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

and my java looks kind of burnt i dont no why i have a 96 watt florecent light. i had took out some fish for about 2 months so i could afford some neons and discus so iahd an absents of fish but now i have 6 orange striped tetras and 3 flying foxes and my plants have been looking like this for about 2 weeks my anubias has some blck dots and appers to be wilting and my java apears dark green and black spots and looks burnt help please its a 40 gallon

Your plants are lacking nutrients since you did not have fish in there for a while and I assume you're not dosing fertilizer. Your nitrate is probably too low. Right now you're running 2.4 watts per gallon which qualifies as a medium light tank. Medium light tanks sometimes require CO2 injection and fertilizer. Try adding Flourish and Flourish Excel and see if that helps. You also don't mention what kind of substrate you have. If it doesn't have laterite in it, or if it's not fluorite or eco-complete you may need to supplement minerals such as iron.

This guy's website is great for planted tank info: http://www.rexgrigg.com/index.html

Colorful South American Cichlids?! Maybe African?! o_0?

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

I'm currently housing South American cichlids.
I wanna add some color to the tank (fish wise) to make it look interesting. Some blue and yellow would be great!
but I don't know much colorful SA cichlids. Maybe some Discus? Rainbow fish? tetras?
I currently own a green terror and a Jack Dempsey.

I also have heard you can mix some African cichlids with SA cichlds but you would have to be very careful. Now, I know there are quite a few colorful African cichlds, but wanna do some more research so fishes aren't harmed :]

~Thank you for your time
55gallon tank

In MOST cases it is not good to house (by the way JD's and GT's are central american) CA cichlids with africans. HOWEVER it can work. What works for one person may not work for another. First off, you will want at least a 100 gallon tank if housing a JD and GT, and plan on adding any other fish. I say this now DO NOT PUT DISCUS in with them. They are completely not compatible, and any tetra or peaceful little cichlid or tropical fish is not recommended, they will just get eaten. If you want some color with them, you CAN try some africans. I would suggest ones like the yellow labs, red zebras, blue dolphins. Links below, but do not get africans that are TOO aggressive, only mildly aggressive. You can also try frontosas, I have seen them mixed with them before, but be aware, I will say this again to warn you, what works for you might not work for anyone else.

And to those who say jask dempseys are very aggressive, not so much. Talk to anyone who owns one, they will probably tell you they have great personatlities and tend to defend their territory rather than go out to kill everyone. But it always depends on the personality of YOUR fish. If you have fish that are very very aggressive, only get fish that will be able to fend for themselves.

Also I must add, you probably won't be changing your water parameters around, at least I hardly ever recommend it, so any fish you get at a pet store will be acclimated to your cities water (ask them if they change anything). So in most cases, unless you have an extremely high or low pH, you can house them together. My pH is 7.6-7.7, so it is actually a pH that most fish can tolerate.

Edit: In that size of tank I don't recommend getting any other fish. If however you had at least a 90 you could have gotten away with a few africans.

(c) 2008 Discus Fish.    •    Brought by Wordpress Themes.    •    Entries (RSS)    •    Comments (RSS)

WordPress Theme Design by Partnerstvo.ru, for Online Poker Casino & Hot Print.