I volunteer with the biology college at my school in the aquatics labs now. It just so happens that nearly every tank besides three are saltwater and I haven't a clue/interest in those.
The main point of this is to talk about the one tank that I am actually interested in: a guppy-breeding tank.
It has several guppies that were donated by some young man and "java moss" for them to breed in. They are unusually plain, so I'm not really sure if they are guppies to begin with, but do have the characteristics of livebearers. This java moss doesn't even look familiar. It's taken over the 30 odd gallon tank as a giant mass of light, lime green matter. It looks like some sort of algae or plant from a US creek which grows naturally as a very dense matt.
My main problem is getting the little buggers to breed. One by one, the poor fish have dropped dead as the months have gone by, but no fry have appeared nor females getting plump. The tank is kept at room temperature (73 degrees F?) at all times. The tank has two Aquaclear 150 filters. Every parameter appears normal.
Is there any way I can induce them to breed? Or should we look at doing a tank overhaul? Would adding salt be beneficial to their reproduction?
I can get pictures of the actual tank Monday to show you all what I mean. In the mean time, I plan on removing the huge number of snails and the 2 cubic feet of whatever "plant" they added to the tank and adding a large clump of my excess java moss (two problems solved for the both of us since I need to prune the plants in my personal tanks anyways).
Like I said, the Biology College really isn't interested in freshwater tanks at this time so I'm trying to help them out by asking you all. Actually, we have a really nice sized grouper that I'm waiting to get to legal limits.... Of course, that's if they ever get tired of the little devil: He tries to take off your fingers as you clean the tank.
The main point of this is to talk about the one tank that I am actually interested in: a guppy-breeding tank.
It has several guppies that were donated by some young man and "java moss" for them to breed in. They are unusually plain, so I'm not really sure if they are guppies to begin with, but do have the characteristics of livebearers. This java moss doesn't even look familiar. It's taken over the 30 odd gallon tank as a giant mass of light, lime green matter. It looks like some sort of algae or plant from a US creek which grows naturally as a very dense matt.
My main problem is getting the little buggers to breed. One by one, the poor fish have dropped dead as the months have gone by, but no fry have appeared nor females getting plump. The tank is kept at room temperature (73 degrees F?) at all times. The tank has two Aquaclear 150 filters. Every parameter appears normal.
Is there any way I can induce them to breed? Or should we look at doing a tank overhaul? Would adding salt be beneficial to their reproduction?
I can get pictures of the actual tank Monday to show you all what I mean. In the mean time, I plan on removing the huge number of snails and the 2 cubic feet of whatever "plant" they added to the tank and adding a large clump of my excess java moss (two problems solved for the both of us since I need to prune the plants in my personal tanks anyways).
Like I said, the Biology College really isn't interested in freshwater tanks at this time so I'm trying to help them out by asking you all. Actually, we have a really nice sized grouper that I'm waiting to get to legal limits.... Of course, that's if they ever get tired of the little devil: He tries to take off your fingers as you clean the tank.