Peppered Cory Eggs and Fry Pics

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tomandrews86

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May 1, 2007
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Ontario, Canada
My peppered corys have been breeding almost constantly since moving them to my 30gal planted tank. I have never had a large number off eggs laid at once and except for a few times I have tried to save them. When I had tried to save them I had problems with fungus and hadn't had any luck getting them to hatch - most likely because I was using either Melafix or Pimafix whichever is the antifungal and to be honest I've never had great luck with either of these meds.

The other day I noticed some eggs on the glass and had no intention of "saving" them, but I did watch them over a few days. Rarely do the eggs last more than a day in my aquarium without being eaten however this time they lasted 3 days in there, to the point where I could see the developing fry in the eggs. Having recently purchased some Mardel I figured I might as well save 'em. After two days in a sour cream tub with a drop of mardel and an air stone they began to hatch.

In this picture you can see the 3 eggs I collected with one of them just starting to hatch. Taken yesterday.
eggs1.JPG

Closeup of the same:
eggs2.JPG

Here are the two fry I managed to get from the 3 original eggs. The egg in this picture is 1 of 7 I collected from my moss ball this morning. The egg to the right in the first picture turned white and collapsed (fungus?).
eggs3.JPG

The two fry in the last picture are miracle fry - that third egg I collected on day one was was rotting and stuck to the eggs these two fry came from. Using a pair of scissors I tried to gently separate it from the healthy and at this point hatching eggs (they both had tails sticking out). It was quite stuck and after getting a bit frustrated with the whole situation I gave it a bit of a shake and it and the two other eggs came free with the scissors and the two little fry swam away.

eggs1.JPG eggs2.JPG eggs3.JPG
 

Rbishop

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Dec 30, 2005
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Mr. Normal
Congrats!
 

bgourami320

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Jun 13, 2010
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Bonnie
Cute, congratulations!
 

fishboy7

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Jun 12, 2010
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Wow! Great job!
 

tomandrews86

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May 1, 2007
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Ontario, Canada
I have a little 2 gallon going in the basement for raising zebra danio fry that has developed quite a thriving colony of micro fauna after seeding it with some dried aquarium trimmings. If you look closely you can see many tiny little critters moving about and under a microscope you can identify many large rotifers in the 0.2 mm- 1.0mm range. I put the danio fry into the tank and neglect 'em for 5-7 days or until everyone is free swimming then start feeding baby brine shrimp and powdered flake food (a mortar and pestle is so handy). I think I will probably try something similar with these corys. Ideally I think I'd like to be feeding them microworms - however I don't have a culture and shipping to my area this time of year is impractical at best and I've had no luck sourcing one locally.

What do you guys think? Suggestions?
 

koldsoup

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Jan 12, 2010
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Congrats! I'm growing out some albino cory fry too.

People like using microworms and such, but since mine hatched in a breeding net, I've just been grinding up pellets for them. I have some pond snails to clean up what they don't finish and it works for me.
 

Bubbles2112

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Jun 22, 2008
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:clap: Great job of saving a couple of eggs and great shots too!! :bowing: I have yet to have a succesful cory hatching :irked: but I keep trying!
 
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