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Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Saturday, August 28, 2010 10:31 AM
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Breeding Journal DataSheet This first post should be updated regularly to include new information as events take place or changes are made to your system General Species: Amphiprion ocellaris Social Structure: Male/Female Size of Individuals: F: 2.5", M: 2" Age of Individuals: 9-12 months Date added to Tank: ~8 months ago Broodstock Tank Details Size of Tank: 72G Substrate Details: Fiji Sand Filtration Details: 20G sump/referg Water Changes: Bi-weekly, ~10G's Water Temperature: 78 Lighting: 2x250MH Lighting Cycle: 3pm-12am Other Tank Inhabitants: False Tang, Flasher Wrasse, Blue Linkia Starfish, Spiny Starfish, Sallylight, Algae Blenny, 4 PJ Cardinals, Coral beauty, Flame Angle, and some snails and scarlet hermits. Broodstock Feeding Details Food Types: 1-2 times a day Feeding Schedule: 6pm and 11pm Spawning Details Date of First Spawn: Not sure Spawn Time of Day: Dates of Consecutive Spawns: 8/14/2010 Courtship Details: Egg Size: Cant find in DT Egg Color: Cant find in DT Egg Count: Cant find in DT Hatch Details Hatch Date: 8/9/2010 Hatch Time of Day: 12:30am # Days after Spawn: ? Larvae Description: Larval Tank Details Temperature: 80 Size of Larval Tank: 10G Substrate Details: Bare Other Tank Decor: None Filtration Details: Air stone Lighting: 60W shop light Lighting Cycle: 24x7 Water Changes: Partial daily Larval Feeding Details Food Types: Rotifers and Othime B Feeding Schedule: Metamorphosis/Settlement Date of Settlement Start: Days after Hatch: Date of Settlement End: Description of Fry: Grow-Out Tank Details Temperature: 80 Size of Grow-Out Tank: 29G Substrate Details: Fiji Sand Other Tank Decor: Live rock and some fake plants Filtration Details: HOB filter Lighting: T8 Lighting Cycle: 4pm-12am Water Changes: Bi-weekly Size at Transfer: Age at Transfer: Grow-Out Feeding Details Food Types: Feeding Schedule: Additional Information Miscellaneous Information: You will be required to provide photographic evidence in this thread of each event submitted for the MBI Program. If your thread does not contain these photos the MBI Committee will not be able to approve your reports.
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Re:Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 8:52 PM
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Well I dont have any pics of the clutch as I could never find them in the DT, but they are now moved to a broodstock tank and I have babies so obviously they hatched... Here is a 1 week old baby fish... =) Let me know what you think!!!!!!!!!!!!! (Sorry the pics suck...)
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Re:Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 9:24 PM
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--Andy, the bucket man. "Not to know the mandolin is to argue oneself unknown...." --Clara Lanza, 1886
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Re:Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 9:51 PM
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LOLZ Now that you mention it.... and now that I am looking at the one side profile shot it kinda does look like that... But that just doesn't make sense....hummm I will need to do some more reading but what do those things eat and how do they spawn and what is their spawn cycle?
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Re:Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 9:51 PM
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I was thinking that too...
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Re:Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 10:08 PM
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Now Im on a mission to find out what it is and how it is reproducing in my DT... this is like 4th or 5th time it has reproduced and I used all the same tricks to catch them. (Lights off, then a flash light with a hose to suck them up.) Also the cycle was like 14-16 days So they hatch just like clown fish..... or at least like egg based producers. This is so weird, and Im really confused now - kinda bummed too but I'll figure this out.
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Re:Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 10:19 PM
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This thread is full of fail... please delete.
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Re:Breeding Journal, Species: Amphiprion ocellaris
Wednesday, September 1, 2010 11:22 PM
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No, not at all. You'd be surprised how often mysids get mistaken for fish larvae. We've all done it. Part of the problem is that they look and act like what we expect fish larvae to, having been conditioned by freshwater fish. But saltwater larvae just don't act like our brains think that they should. Remember, they are pelagic. They don't hide from light. Heck, they don't hide at all. They float with the current in the upper levels of the water column, using as little energy as possible. Adult mysids (that's an adult you have there) are active in the water column, swimming this way and that. They tend to stay near the bottom or near somewhere to hide. Exactly like you'd expect from a fish larva, except that fish larvae don't do that at all. The mysid females are brooders, releasing live young when they hatch. The adults tend to spend a lot of time eating their young (one of the reasons that they swoop around the water column so much). I _love_ watching them swim. If I had a nano tank on my desk I would be tempted to just make it a colony of mysids. Except that I'd never get any work done. But please don't feel embarrassed. Like I say, this happens to a lot of people (including me). And it's really good to have the conversation here, so other people can learn, too.
--Andy, the bucket man. "Not to know the mandolin is to argue oneself unknown...." --Clara Lanza, 1886
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