Clown Loach Breeding - Related Items
The following account is about an article that is of interest, but must be treated with great skepticism. The original article was illustrated by excellent colour drawings, because the author claimed that his photographs taken at the time were unobtainable. This was due to being stored in a garage to which access was blocked by a large pile of earth and rubble.
Over 10 years later, these photographs have never been published.
Originally in Practical Fishkeeping magazine, Feb. 96
Summarized by Martin Thoene
Comments by Ken Childs
Originally posted on Loaches online in 1998
Someone here in the UK actually bred
Clown Loaches!!!!!!! This actually happened back in 95/96, not sure
exactly when, but the info comes from an article in the British Magazine
"Practical Fishkeeping", Feb.'96.
The Author is Granville
Hammond of Devon Discus (Discus Breeder). He kept clowns with his Discus,
but found the Clowns were stealing all the food and making the Discus
nervous by "whiskering" them at night. He decided to get rid
of most of the clowns to friends, keeping just 4 at 11-13" length
(nice clowns!).
One hot Summer day one friend returned home from work to find that the clowns in his charge had eaten all of his prized 4" Giant Danios!!!!!!!! They were behaving very strangely, prowling up and down as if distressed (probably ate too much!). He checked all water parameters, but found nothing odd, apart from a couple of degrees higher than normal temperature. After a "cool" water change all returned to normal.
Two weeks later, Granvilles 4 fish suddenly refused food.
The next day they started prowling around as his friend described. The
water was OK, but he changed some anyway as the only common factor with
his friends tank was that both were overdue for a water change. The
fish calmed down. He decided to try and duplicate the situation to see
if the behavior would change again. Initially, Temp. was 84F, PH 6.8,
Ammonia & Nitrite nil,Nitrate 25 ppm or lower. After a week of heavy
feeding the Temp was 82F, pH 6.5, and other stuff the same. On day 12
they refused food and the weird behavior returned. Temp was 86F, pH 6.3,
others the same, except nitrate up to 50ppm.
Remembering the out of
character murder of the Giant Danios, he decided to see if the fish
might be interested in some White-bait he had in the Freezer. What happened
next was incredible. The fish went crazy. He says "Frenzied Feeding"
would be an understatement! They refused all food except the fish, which
they ate until bloated, resuming their "hunting" a few hours
later.
4 weeks later after this intensive feeding, the female loaches
were over 2" taller than the males. All fish had doubled in girth
(hardly surprising really), and had intensified coloring. Nitrates had
gone of the scale, so he added a canister filter with nitrate removing
resin. pH was now 6.1. Due to evaporation the water level had dropped
3". At this point he reconnected the tank back into his centralized
filtration system, feeding the tank via a "shower head" return.
Within 48 hours the fish behavior was back to normal. After feeding,
two fish would rise to the surface,entwined together, and " clicking"
to one another (I'm sure most clown owners will have heard these noises).
They were a male & female but no eggs were produced.
BUT THE NEXT
MORNING!!!!!! Small, slightly golden eggs were on the tank sides and
base and on some plastic pipe hidey-holes for the fish. Temp was 82F,
pH 6.7, nil Ammonia & Nitrite, Nitrate less than 25ppm in the tank
where he placed the pipework with eggs. The fish, which appeared exhausted
(obviously, a busy night!) suddenly perked up and Breakfasted on the
remaining eggs!
Upwards of 450 fry hatched and were fed on a proprietary
liquid food for 2 weeks, with a supplement of crushed flake after 10
days. Crushed flake was then fed alone and the fish grew rapidly till
they could take whole flake. At 6 weeks, they were 1" long total
length, then growth slowed.
An interesting aside is that when they were
distributed around the country it was reported that they were resistant
to Whitespot and survived in tanks where other fish succumbed . If we
speculate that conditions change in the wild seasonally, maybe the effects
of drought, temp. rise, less than perfect water conditions, reduced
level, followed by rains were duplicated as near as is possible and
this stimulated the fish into their normal cycle for breeding.
Obviously,
these were older, big fish. Clowns are long-lived and no doubt may not
reach sexual maturity until they are several years old. Their tastes
may change as they mature (lots of fish change diet as they grow). It's
only through information exchange that this knowledge will spread around
the globe.
Only recently I've read on this very forum that some really
big clowns were fed feeder goldfish, so maybe we had all better look
at our cute little stripey friends again in a different light. Maybe
their tank mates should worry about becoming a meal in the future as
the clowns grow up! I guess the potential for murder is there.
Only last week I was in a local dealers who had a tank of 50 plus 1 1/2" baby clowns. One of the assistants was feeding them by hand with frozen fish meat. I guess we've all seen stupid movies with Piranha attacks. You know , the water foams and boils. Well I've seen it in a tank of clowns. Now I feed mine some fish-meat as I figure if they like it that much, it might just stop them from looking in a suspicious way at my Tetras!
Martin.
I just read the article on the breeding Clown loaches. That's interesting
stuff! The writer mentions that the fish will probably have to be several
years old to be sexually mature. I know of clowns that were definitely
over 40 years old that were in a 1000 gallon display tank in a retail
store. The fish were about 5 inches when first purchased in 1948 (I
saw them in 1988). They were about 12" in 1988.
Some people I know that are trying to injection spawn them have never found mature fish that were under 7". Also the maximum size for these is often quoted at about 12". I personally measured a fish that was 15" so odds are there are bigger ones in the wild. The reason big ones aren't often seen outside of Indonesia is the air freight expense to get them from Asia. In the same space you can pack 300 of a 1.5" fish, you can pack only 1 of these big guys.
Ken
By: Ola Ahlander
March 27th, 2002This picture is of two of my big clowns who passed away by an accident
with my filters. I didn't want to throw them away, so I opened one of
them and she was full of eggs! I dropped them in formaline and gave
them to a friend of mine who works at the Ichthyological ´department
at the Swedish museum of Natural History, where they now are preserved
for the afterworld (that's why the colors are gone). The eggs where
greenish grey before the preservation. Even if it is a big step from
this to breeding, it gives some hope, don't it? I still got 12 more
clowns at almost the same size. Maybe some day...
Ola Ahlander
Editor's note: The fact that this Clown had eggs inside is intriguing and if you compare the fish there are visible differences in shape that could be sex related.
Much of the above was originally posted several years ago. Since then, the hormone -induced breeding of Clown Loaches has become a fairly regular occurence within the ornamental fish trade. They are bred in parts of Se Asia and in the Czech Republic.
Here are some pictures from Heok Hee Ng of Clown fry.
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