ahh, that makes perfect sense!meyerhaus said:They do love the down tubes. It seems to me that they desire maximum water flow to keep the eggs clean; where better than the down tube?
ahh, that makes perfect sense!meyerhaus said:They do love the down tubes. It seems to me that they desire maximum water flow to keep the eggs clean; where better than the down tube?
meyerhaus said:If they are from the same spawn, it is easier to tell the males as they are the bigger of the pair.
star_rider said:males are not always bigger than females. generally I would agree with this(males larger than females).
the best way to tell male from female is to watch the spawn and take a look at the ovipositor(breeding tube). the females tube is short and thick.. the males is thin and longer.
males are not always bigger than females. generally I would agree with this(males larger than females).
however, i have seen females that are very large.. bigger than the males.
I have a large female in one pair..she is almost as large as the male...and larger than my other breeding male. I have three confirmed pairs.(I think the size has more to do with the lineage)
I find that the wild fish (in my case) grow faster as they are more aggressive at feeding.
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Another way that I've noticed is that the females, as with humans, are a lot meaner and a heck of a lot more dangerous.