It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
I grew up with an aquarium. I also have one right now in the dining room, although it only has one eight inch long goldfish and another five inch long black google eyed goldfish in it along with one of those crabby flat fish that chases the goldfish around if they come too close to it.
originally posted by: Fools
originally posted by: rickymouse
originally posted by: CharlesT
No but You can catch what you want to keep and pour the rest out.
Quit being so practical.
How is that practical? Have you ever had an aquarium?
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: Nyiah
NOOOOOO!!
If you want your fish to live, you won't do this. By bleaching the tank, you will be destroying the cycle. There are valuable and needed bacteria on every single surface of the tank. Bleaching will kill them and cause you go through new tank syndrome all over again.
Unless you have another tank all the fish can go into for at least a month or two while you recycle the tank you just nuked with bleach, don't go there and then immediately put the fish right back in. You will completely disrupt the cycle causing ammonia and then nitrite and nitrate spikes. All three of these poison and can and will kill fish and are the biggest reasons people get put off the aquarium hobby.
originally posted by: ketsuko
The first question is what kind of fish do you have that is breeding? Most fish do lay eggs, but most common egg laying fish are egg scatterers and those eggs are very, very tiny, and every fish in the tank will regard them as a tasty, tasty snack. It's rare to actually get a surviving fry without loading the odds in favor of the fry.
There are another popular category called livebearers: mollies, platys, swordtails, and guppies. They don't ever lay eggs. All that is done internally, and then the mother spits out live young into the water column. If you tank has sufficient hiding spots, babies will survive and you very easily can get chaos like you describe. But no eggs. Your best bet to control the young is to either sacrifice them yourself, find a friend who has a fish that appreciates live food and would appreciate a ready source of healthy feeders or learn how to sex your adults and keep only males or only females.
The third category include fish that do practice some parental care, but again, you aren't going to see eggs all over the place. Those fish will lay contained clusters and one or both parents will take turns guarding the eggs and then the young. Mostly these will be cichlids, but you do also see parental care in plecostomus catfish although you aren't going to be accidentally breeding those unless maybe you have a pair of bristlenose plecos.
So I would suggest that perhaps the "eggs" aren't actually eggs. Maybe they are something else? If you have a gravel vac, do a good siphoning. You ought to be engaging in weekly 30 to 50% water changes anyhow. See if a gravel vacing doesn't get rid of your issues in a week or three with the eggs.
As for the babies, without more information on where they are really coming from, it's hard to say. Depending on what they are though, sometimes, you can work a trade with your LFS for a bit of credit. The babies will have to have some size on them, but most fish stores like locally grown healthy cichlid or pleco fry, for example. Live bearers are not quite as easy to offload.
originally posted by: Fools
originally posted by: ketsuko
The first question is what kind of fish do you have that is breeding? Most fish do lay eggs, but most common egg laying fish are egg scatterers and those eggs are very, very tiny, and every fish in the tank will regard them as a tasty, tasty snack. It's rare to actually get a surviving fry without loading the odds in favor of the fry.
There are another popular category called livebearers: mollies, platys, swordtails, and guppies. They don't ever lay eggs. All that is done internally, and then the mother spits out live young into the water column. If you tank has sufficient hiding spots, babies will survive and you very easily can get chaos like you describe. But no eggs. Your best bet to control the young is to either sacrifice them yourself, find a friend who has a fish that appreciates live food and would appreciate a ready source of healthy feeders or learn how to sex your adults and keep only males or only females.
The third category include fish that do practice some parental care, but again, you aren't going to see eggs all over the place. Those fish will lay contained clusters and one or both parents will take turns guarding the eggs and then the young. Mostly these will be cichlids, but you do also see parental care in plecostomus catfish although you aren't going to be accidentally breeding those unless maybe you have a pair of bristlenose plecos.
So I would suggest that perhaps the "eggs" aren't actually eggs. Maybe they are something else? If you have a gravel vac, do a good siphoning. You ought to be engaging in weekly 30 to 50% water changes anyhow. See if a gravel vacing doesn't get rid of your issues in a week or three with the eggs.
As for the babies, without more information on where they are really coming from, it's hard to say. Depending on what they are though, sometimes, you can work a trade with your LFS for a bit of credit. The babies will have to have some size on them, but most fish stores like locally grown healthy cichlid or pleco fry, for example. Live bearers are not quite as easy to offload.
They are mollies - so you are saying that just getting rid of them will do the trick?
originally posted by: mtnshredder
originally posted by: Fools
originally posted by: ketsuko
The first question is what kind of fish do you have that is breeding? Most fish do lay eggs, but most common egg laying fish are egg scatterers and those eggs are very, very tiny, and every fish in the tank will regard them as a tasty, tasty snack. It's rare to actually get a surviving fry without loading the odds in favor of the fry.
There are another popular category called livebearers: mollies, platys, swordtails, and guppies. They don't ever lay eggs. All that is done internally, and then the mother spits out live young into the water column. If you tank has sufficient hiding spots, babies will survive and you very easily can get chaos like you describe. But no eggs. Your best bet to control the young is to either sacrifice them yourself, find a friend who has a fish that appreciates live food and would appreciate a ready source of healthy feeders or learn how to sex your adults and keep only males or only females.
The third category include fish that do practice some parental care, but again, you aren't going to see eggs all over the place. Those fish will lay contained clusters and one or both parents will take turns guarding the eggs and then the young. Mostly these will be cichlids, but you do also see parental care in plecostomus catfish although you aren't going to be accidentally breeding those unless maybe you have a pair of bristlenose plecos.
So I would suggest that perhaps the "eggs" aren't actually eggs. Maybe they are something else? If you have a gravel vac, do a good siphoning. You ought to be engaging in weekly 30 to 50% water changes anyhow. See if a gravel vacing doesn't get rid of your issues in a week or three with the eggs.
As for the babies, without more information on where they are really coming from, it's hard to say. Depending on what they are though, sometimes, you can work a trade with your LFS for a bit of credit. The babies will have to have some size on them, but most fish stores like locally grown healthy cichlid or pleco fry, for example. Live bearers are not quite as easy to offload.
They are mollies - so you are saying that just getting rid of them will do the trick?
If you have Mollies only, you don’t have eggs, they’re live bearers. What is your PH, Nitate, Nitrite and Ammonia levels? It could be mold from over feeding, snails, eggs from other fish or.........
We need more info and a pic would be nice before you go randomly diving into a fix. You have ph with camera yes?
A vacuum clean and a 40%-50% water change would be a safe place to start. What are the eggs or spots attached to?
originally posted by: Fools
originally posted by: mtnshredder
originally posted by: Fools
originally posted by: ketsuko
The first question is what kind of fish do you have that is breeding? Most fish do lay eggs, but most common egg laying fish are egg scatterers and those eggs are very, very tiny, and every fish in the tank will regard them as a tasty, tasty snack. It's rare to actually get a surviving fry without loading the odds in favor of the fry.
There are another popular category called livebearers: mollies, platys, swordtails, and guppies. They don't ever lay eggs. All that is done internally, and then the mother spits out live young into the water column. If you tank has sufficient hiding spots, babies will survive and you very easily can get chaos like you describe. But no eggs. Your best bet to control the young is to either sacrifice them yourself, find a friend who has a fish that appreciates live food and would appreciate a ready source of healthy feeders or learn how to sex your adults and keep only males or only females.
The third category include fish that do practice some parental care, but again, you aren't going to see eggs all over the place. Those fish will lay contained clusters and one or both parents will take turns guarding the eggs and then the young. Mostly these will be cichlids, but you do also see parental care in plecostomus catfish although you aren't going to be accidentally breeding those unless maybe you have a pair of bristlenose plecos.
So I would suggest that perhaps the "eggs" aren't actually eggs. Maybe they are something else? If you have a gravel vac, do a good siphoning. You ought to be engaging in weekly 30 to 50% water changes anyhow. See if a gravel vacing doesn't get rid of your issues in a week or three with the eggs.
As for the babies, without more information on where they are really coming from, it's hard to say. Depending on what they are though, sometimes, you can work a trade with your LFS for a bit of credit. The babies will have to have some size on them, but most fish stores like locally grown healthy cichlid or pleco fry, for example. Live bearers are not quite as easy to offload.
They are mollies - so you are saying that just getting rid of them will do the trick?
If you have Mollies only, you don’t have eggs, they’re live bearers. What is your PH, Nitate, Nitrite and Ammonia levels? It could be mold from over feeding, snails, eggs from other fish or.........
We need more info and a pic would be nice before you go randomly diving into a fix. You have ph with camera yes?
A vacuum clean and a 40%-50% water change would be a safe place to start. What are the eggs or spots attached to?
I may be just assuming they are eggs, or possibly eggs for the couple of other types of fish I have in the aquarium. They are tiny little yellow specks I can see on the drift wood at the bottom of the tank. I do clean it regularly and all is to spec (it's a two year old tank now). I am getting rid of the mollies at a local pet store and will see what happens.
Thnks!