
abt 7-8inch TL. Female ?

I'd be interested to see how a tank seperator would work, as i believe the reason NHA use separate tanks is so no pheremones/hormones etc are sensed by the other fish as they are in separate bodies of water.amiidae wrote:Thanks for the info, Richard.
I will probably setup a tank separator and remove it when they 'look' ready.
Me too. From the people who have successfully bred synos in my area, I have gathered that pheremones/hormones play a huge part in the whole reproductive process. It has been recommended to me to have some other fish in the same tank as the female that are breeding. Guppies, mbuna, whatever. Anything that will survive in the same water conditions and breed and thus produce their own pheromones.Richard B wrote:I'd be interested to see how a tank seperator would work, as i believe the reason NHA use separate tanks is so no pheremones/hormones etc are sensed by the other fish as they are in separate bodies of water.
Heheh! You said "do do".Richard B wrote:What they do do
I still have the choice to put them in separate tanks but thinking of using divider method out of convenience and also treat them like some aggressive cichlids with small hole on the separator for the smaller fish to retreat or cross over when he is ready.Richard B wrote:I'd be interested to see how a tank seperator would work, as i believe the reason NHA use separate tanks is so no pheremones/hormones etc are sensed by the other fish as they are in separate bodies of water.amiidae wrote:Thanks for the info, Richard.
I will probably setup a tank separator and remove it when they 'look' ready.
I know what you mean. I have friends who deliberately added some whiptails in their L46 tank and once the WT started breeding, their L46 spawn as well.Scleropages wrote:Me too. From the people who have successfully bred synos in my area, I have gathered that pheremones/hormones play a huge part in the whole reproductive process. It has been recommended to me to have some other fish in the same tank as the female that are breeding. Guppies, mbuna, whatever. Anything that will survive in the same water conditions and breed and thus produce their own pheromones.Richard B wrote:I'd be interested to see how a tank seperator would work, as i believe the reason NHA use separate tanks is so no pheremones/hormones etc are sensed by the other fish as they are in separate bodies of water.
It's also always best to introduce your male(s) and female(s) together when there is a big change in atmospheric barometric pressure--the signal of a storm coming in. Some big water changes, daily or every other day, help too.
I would think people who are breeding Cyphotilapia frontosa, another deep water fish, will have the best conditions for breeding S. granulosa. You might even be able to breed them together in the same tank, so long as the tank is big enough that they can ignore each other.
Man, this makes me want to finally get my setup going for attempting to breed my S. angelica.