Mcfluffin
New Member
Hi everyone...
I am getting a female rudis (who is pregnant) in the next few weeks. I know a fair bit about their care in general...temp drops, high humidity etc. I was wondering if there are any tips people could give me on helping the mother to give birth successfully, as well as successful rearing of the babies. This is my first livebearer, so it is a bit of a step for me. It is always best to here from people who have been successful though, so thought I'd ask.
At the moment I have read that sometimes leaving the female in a very quiet area in beneficial (perhaps with the viv hidden away behind a hanging towel or sheet)?
Is there a benefit to providing a lot of nutritional food, or should this be limited during the pregnancy?
I also plan to house any babies seperately in the small translucent plastic boxes with mesh tops (like toy storage boxes). This way they should be able to get to their food, reduce stress and keep high humidity.
Does this make sense, and can anyone add any good tips for these livebearing montane species.
Thanks
Joe
I am getting a female rudis (who is pregnant) in the next few weeks. I know a fair bit about their care in general...temp drops, high humidity etc. I was wondering if there are any tips people could give me on helping the mother to give birth successfully, as well as successful rearing of the babies. This is my first livebearer, so it is a bit of a step for me. It is always best to here from people who have been successful though, so thought I'd ask.
At the moment I have read that sometimes leaving the female in a very quiet area in beneficial (perhaps with the viv hidden away behind a hanging towel or sheet)?
Is there a benefit to providing a lot of nutritional food, or should this be limited during the pregnancy?
I also plan to house any babies seperately in the small translucent plastic boxes with mesh tops (like toy storage boxes). This way they should be able to get to their food, reduce stress and keep high humidity.
Does this make sense, and can anyone add any good tips for these livebearing montane species.
Thanks
Joe