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Friday, July 30, 2010

Trouble With German Blue Ram Fry

Posted by Sarah on January 3, 2009

I recently had a question about German Blue Rams from Josh, who agreed that I could share his question with you, in the hopes that he could get some more suggestions.

If you have any suggestions we’d greatly appreciate it.

“I was wondering if you could help me i am having a terrible problem keeping ram fry alive!

I have 2 pairs of breeding blue rams and am on batch number 7 with no fry surviving longer than 2 weeks.

The eggs are hatched in a 10 gal nursery tank with 3 live plants, 2 established sponge filters and no gravel.

There is some nice bright green algae on the back wall of the tank.

I do water changes every other day about 50% with water from the breeding tank (which is perfect).

I keep the tank at around 76-78 deg. i believe the fish are going hungry.

I have tried hikari first bites, brine shrimp, and now have tried infusoria but not able to make any.

Do you have any hints for me to be able to raise these rams?

Any clues are greatly appreciated.”

Josh

And my response:

Hi Josh, I’m sorry that you’re having trouble with your ram fry.

I know that Discus keepers say it’s very important to keep any algae or slime off the tank, so that it won’t make them sick, so the algae might be bad for the fry, although it doesn’t seem likely.

We always set up a new 10 gallon for the fry using a sponge filter that we keep in the parents tank, and we use RO water for both tanks.

Do you mind if I post this on the blog to see if anyone there has any ideas that might help?

I’m going to let my husband take over, since the Rams are his pet project.

I might suggest raising the temperature in the baby tank to about 80 degrees sometimes warmer water will increase the appetite.

I would also cut down on the water changes out of the baby tank.

What I usually do is take a piece of air tube and use it as a little siphon so I do not get babies and I can get most of the waste out.

I only suck the waste out for about the first two months and replace the little bit of water I suck out with fresh Reverse Osmosis water.

Then as they get older I increase the size of the water changes.

I feed freshly hatched baby brine shrimp and Hikari first bites from the day the eggs hatch, so your food is dead on.

If you would like to get away from hatching shirmp daily Brineshrimpdirect.com has many great high protein replacement foods. I have used the arctic copepods freeze dried rotifers and decapsulated brine shrimp eggs with good success.

Well that is about all I can think of at this time.

Please keep in touch and let me know how it goes. Rams are one of my favorite fish and I have greatly enjoyed keeping and raising them.

I hope this helps you out and you get lots of ram fry too.

Good luck, and please keep in touch and let me know how it goes.

Sarah and Jeff

Do you have any suggestions for Josh?

What have you done to get your ram fry to grow and thrive?

German Blue Ram Fry Update

Posted by Sarah on August 4, 2008

Our newest batch of German Blue Ram Fry

Our newest batch of German Blue Ram Fry

German Blue Rams

The newest batch of German Blue Rams is still going strong.

We have them in a 10 gallon bare bottom tank, and we started feeding them fry food and baby brine shrimp as soon as they were ready to eat.

They seem to be growing a lot faster than the last batch, and we think it’s because we’re feeding them baby brine shrimp every day, now that we’ve got the hang of it.

We sold the last of our first batch of German Blue Rams over the weekend.

I was sad to see them go, but I’m sure they went to good homes, and they’ll be happy not to be crowded into a 20 gallon tank any more.

I think we have at least 40 smaller fry left, but I’m not sure, it’s so hard to count when the tiny little things are darting around everywhere!

German Blue Ram Fry – 5 Month Update

Posted by Sarah on July 23, 2008

German Blue Rams - 5 months old

German Blue Rams - 5 months old


We still have 17 of the German Blue Ram Fry that hatched in February.

I can’t believe that they are so big, but at the same time I can’t believe that they aren’t bigger.

We’ve moved the fry once – from a 10 gallon tank into a 20 gallon tank.

Both tanks had bare bottoms, and although we’ve tried to hatch eggs in tanks with gravel, none of the fry have survived.

The fry are in RO water now, and we are able to tell a few of the males and females apart.

They are still getting Baby brine shrimp (BBS) almost daily, because we are making it for the smaller ram fry, and we always have a ton left over.

They are also eating several different kinds of flake food, and ultracolor pellet food.

We did have a couple of losses after the first few times we fed them the pellet food, but we’d also been out of town for a day or two before that, so I’m not sure what caused the losses.

It would be nice to keep a few of them and watch them grow up, but right now we don’t have the room.

Jeff has contacted the people who have expressed interest them in before and told them the rams were ready, so …

Fry Updates

Posted by Sarah on July 15, 2008

The German Ram fry are still going strong – they are finally starting to take on that Ram shape, although they are still pretty small.

There are a lot less of them than we started out with, but there are still at least 20 or so, so I’m happy.

We also have some Bushynose pleco fry that just left the cave yesterday.

Well one left yesterday, two are out now, and the rest are still in the cave.

There is an article about Breeding Bristlenoses in the August, 2008 Tropical Fish Hobbyist magazine, and it says that the fry are cannibalistic, so that probably explains why don’t have too many that survive.

We do have two larger fry from about 3 spawns ago, so I am sure they are having a field day with the younger fry.

Here’s one of the newer fry. He’s so tiny!

Bristlenose Pleco Fry