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2007-02-03 05:40:51 · 10 answers · asked by John S 2 in Pets Fish

10 answers

They always will or at least until the babies are too big.

Breeding guppies really is just as simple as most people say it is but if you really want to be serious about it there are a few considerations.

Tank requirements: You need to have two tanks at least 10 gallons in size. The first one should be cycled and all settled ready for your new guppies. The second should be filled with water and have a sponge filter running. It should also gave a heater and lots of hiding places for the babies. Set up both tanks and keep the temperature in both about 74-78 F, guppies will do well in that range. pH, hardness and other water conditions are not very important to guppies. They tolerant a very wide range of parameters.

Feeding: For the adults you need to feed a good basic flake food as well as the occasional treat of frozen foods. Buy a couple of them to swap between, blood wroms, mosquito larvae, brine shrimp are all good. For the babies you need baby brine shrimo to feed for the first few days and some cruches flake to start mixing in after that. Yes, you can just crush the flake yuou use for the adults.

The Fish: Get 1 male for every 2-3 females. No need to get many, after all you expect to breed plenty! Most you find at pet stores will already be pregnant so if you are really serious about getting just the right color you will need to by from a serious breeder or be prepared to work at it a while.

The mating: Just put them together and they will do the rest.

Once the female is very gravid (pregnant) move her to the empty tank and leave her there until she has the babies. Once she has them you can more her back to the main tank. Feed the babies fairly often, 4-5 times a day isn't too often and change 40 - 50% of the tank water every 2-3 days. The larger the babies get the more often you will have to change water until the babies are adults.

Raising the babies: Feed the babies fairly often, 4-5 times a day isn't too often and change 40 - 50% of the tank water every 2-3 days. The larger the babies get the more often you will have to change water until the babies are adults. Install a tank divider in the baby tank as soon as possible and once you can tell males from females start to seperate them. Most serious breeders end up using two tanks, so you might want to plan on that in the future. Seperate them as soon as possible! Also do not give up on the water changes! They are critical for proper growth! I cannot stress this enough!

Culling: Culling is removing undesirable fish from your stock. Remove any deformed fish you see as soon as you see them. It's not uncommon to have a few deformed fish. Humanely kill these as you certainly don't want them breeding. Once the babies are nearly grown you will be able to pick out the best looking male and best lookig females. This is where color choice comes in. You will most likely have fish of two or three different colors. Return you original fish and the extra babies to the pet store or donate them to another fish keeper, to a school, whatever. Place your best male and three best females in the now empty main tank. and let them do what come naturally. Then you will start the whole process over.

While you are raising the babies, you will have babies from one of the other females too if not both of them. You will have to choose, set up another tank for them or leave them with the adults to do as well as they can. Your call. As you can see, you could end up with tanks all over the house in no time at all, so be aware you can't keep them all! LOL

After a few generations you will need to add fresh breeding stock to your line. Try to find a really good looking male that fits your colors and breed him to some of your females for fresh genes in the line. Doing this every so often will improve your fish and prevent problems from too much inbreeding. Inbreeding fixes traits in the line, both good traits and bad traits, so bring in new stock from time to time.

If you really fall in love with guppy breeding you will really want to be a member of the IFGA (International Fancy Guppy Association). They can teach you so much more than this basic over view and the members are a great source of really superior breeding stock. You can find their website online.

Hope this helps a little and good luck with your breeding efforts!

2007-02-03 05:50:56 · answer #1 · answered by magicman116 7 · 0 1

They do not eat their young....or at least the fast ones. Seriously, I started with a breeding pair 7 years ago and now have hundereds in all different sized tanks and bowls that are children of that pair. I never separated the young. My way is to have sand in bottom and lots of plants for babies to hide in. I think each fishg has 15-30 babies though I think only about 7 survive. It is evolution in the tank! Just like nature. I doubt guppies eat their young but if they did, it would be the slow unhealthy ones which keeps the herd healthy. You might have 2 different tanks so that after a few years you can cross breed those to keep genetics good. Guppies are soooo easy with this formula, everlasting guppies no effort.

2007-02-03 06:14:52 · answer #2 · answered by genomik2 1 · 0 0

If u take hot shower, u can do so immediately. So far as eating is concerned, if u feel very hungry after workout, wait till the pang subsides. Eat nourishing food with plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables being part of it. Chew each morsel at least 32 times. This will activate signal to the brain as soon as u have had enough. Besides this change in eating style, take regular light exercises and brisk walks every day. U will be able to gain/shed all extra weight gracefully and in a reasonable time span.

2016-05-23 23:35:48 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The guppies will never stop if you don't do something.It is natural. If you can't seperate the offspring from the parents in another tank, you can float some plastic plants on the surface so the babies have a place to hide until thay get bigger.

2007-02-03 05:54:24 · answer #4 · answered by finch momma 3 · 0 1

Youre supposed to get the offspring out of the tank and put the in another. Or that to the othr fish. because they will eat all of em.

2007-02-03 05:44:37 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

OK i recomend you to get a small goldfigh bown. or you can get a spiecial screen. what you do is shoop up the young with a cup. and put them in a bowl or the caged in area. what ever you do dont use the net. i'v done that befor and you kill them easly. they are also hard to take out of the net.

2007-02-03 09:56:20 · answer #6 · answered by MB 3 · 0 0

For as long as you let them.

2007-02-03 05:47:19 · answer #7 · answered by mustanger 5 · 1 1

I'm guessing until they are full.

2007-02-03 05:44:22 · answer #8 · answered by Ann 3 · 1 1

ever

2007-02-03 05:43:17 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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