Dry and Rainy Seasons in
the Tank
by Kristian Adolfsson
of Sweden
General:
Many fish from tropical areas spawn seasonally due to
changes in their natural environment. Most often they spawn
when the rainy season begins, because it brings increased
food supply and increased possibilities for the fry to find
food and shelter. Re-creating as many of the changes as
possible that occur during the rainy season's beginning
might be one way to spawn species that otherwise are very
difficult to spawn. Many species are so easy to spawn you
need not use the often cumbersome methods that are described
below, but certain species and groups of species might need
them. First try the general rules for breeding a certain
species or group of species, but if you don't succeed, try
the suggestions below.
The following is a compilation of a way to breed fishes
that come from areas with marked dry and rainy seasons, e.g.
the Amazon and Rio Negro areas of South America. Data and
ideas have been collected from a lot of different sources;
including books, friends and the Internet, and are based on
my own experiences breeding catfishes and tetras from South
America.
This simulated dry and rainy season cycle takes about 4
weeks to go through. Using a simpler method people have been
able to breed Panaque nigrolineatus, Sturisoma sp.,
and Siamese algae eaters, which are thought to be very
difficult to spawn.
Spawning triggers in nature:
Below follows a list of the different changes that can
occur during the rainy season's beginning and that might
trigger a species to spawn. They are not listed in any
particular order, and which of them various species need to
spawn is not fully known.
- Low pressure
After a long period of high pressure at the end of the dry
season, the barometric pressure falls in connection with
the first rain.
- Increased food supply
After a starvation period during the end of the dry season
the food supply increases drastically. Certain species
look like skeletons at the end of the dry season, and have
perhaps been without food for more than a month. Certain
species even eat detritus to get some nutrition.
- Changed food types
During the dry season the scarce food might consist of
bottom dwelling animals (red mosquito larvae) and decaying
plant parts. When the rainy season starts the food changes
to insects that fall onto the surface: mosquito larvae
(especially white and perhaps black) and other water
insects, pollen from flowers, seeds, fruits, fresh leaves
and eggs, and fry from other species that have begun to
spawn earlier.
- Increased water flow
The rain results in increased flow of water. The fish
become more active. Some species migrate upstream to get
to calmer and more suitable spawning areas.
- Increased oxygen levels
Rain that falls on the water surface increases the oxygen
level in the water. Increased water flow also makes the
oxygen level increase. In many cases a high oxygen level
is a condition for the eggs and fry to make it during
their first days.
- Dilution of dissolved substances in the water
The longer the dry season lasts, the more salts, humic
substances and organic material are concentrated in the
water that remains. When the rain starts the concentration
of these substances decreases due to dilution. The river,
the stream etc. is diluted with rainwater that has zero
hardness, which lowers the hardness and often even
the pH.
- Change in water temperature
Water temperature is often lowered due to cloudiness and
the cold rainwater. In high terrain temperature
differences are often greater than down in the lowlands
(10ÂșC compared to a few degrees).
- Change in water depth
Increased water volume causes the water to deepen. Water
pressure at the bottom increases and the fish get a larger
vertical swimming space. Distance to the water surface
will be longer for species that go to the surface to catch
air.
- Spawning sites become available
At the end of the rainy season there is often water only
in the middle of the river or stream, and there are very
few plants or hiding places. With increasing water depth,
the fish can find newly flooded areas with plants, roots,
tree trunks and shadows, in which to hide eggs and give
the fry a better chance to hide.
- Changes in the light
The amount of light and duration of light decreases due to
cloudiness in connection with the rain. Certain parts of
the day can be very dark during the most intense rain.
With more clouds in the sky it takes longer in the morning
before it gets light and it darkens faster in the evening.
Even light angles vary from one part of the year to the
other. The further from the equator, the more the
variation.
Note that certain species want almost complete darkness to
spawn (they live under dense vegetation, among tree roots
and in black water).
- Increased plant plankton level
When the rainy season occurs this increases in certain
waters. This is also a signal to the adult fish to spawn
because there is food for smaller fry.
- Right time of the year
Certain species have a very strong "biological clock" that
is linked to when the rain and dry seasons occur in their
natural distribution area.
- Other fish spawn
Hormones in the water from other fish spawns might prompt
another species to spawn.
- Sound
Even the rain's splashing against the surface might be a
signal to spawn. Maybe also the sound of thunder.
How do we simulate these things in the tank?
Below are suggestions on how to simulate the different
stimuli that are listed above. Which to choose depends on
which species is to be bred. Certain species might require
only a few, e.g. good feeding and a water change with lower
water temperature, while others need most of the items from
the list. The list below follows the same order as above:
- Low pressure
Many have written about their fish having spawned during
periods of low pressure. However, the same species might
in many cases have spawned during a period of high
pressure if the right circumstances had been present. Low
pressure is of course impossible to simulate in a tank, so
keep an eye on the weather forecasts and start a simulated
rainy season during the passage of a period of low
pressure. A barometer might be good to have handy to check
the trend for air pressure.
- Increased food supply
If fish are in good condition when they are set to spawn,
they can manage to starve for several weeks. When feeding
begins again, this will trigger the instinct to spawn.
- Changed food types
A change of food might trigger a spawn. In some waters in
South America the amount of mosquito larvae increases
(especially white mosquito larvae) at the beginning of the
rainy season. If you don't feed mosquito larvae before
setting a species to spawn, and then begin to feed with
them during the simulated beginning of the rainy season -
this will simulate the change.
- Increased water flow
Easily solved with different forms of pumps and filters.
Certain species lay their eggs close to the largest water
flow in the tank - e.g. in front of the filter outflow.
- Increased oxygen levels
Use an air driven filter and air stones. One can also let
a motor filter "splash" in the surface to increase the
amount of oxygen. An air diffuser can also be used.
- Dilution of dissolved substances in the water
Build a higher level of humic substances ( e.g. peat and
alder cones) and salts (fertiliser, CaCO3, MgSO4)
during the simulated dry season. Later, dilute with as
soft water as possible when the rainy season begins
(preferably RO water).
- Change of water temperature
Use submersible heaters to keep the temperature up during
the dry season. Note that certain species can't take too
high or too low temperatures and that certain species
prefer high temperatures to spawn. These species perhaps
seek out flooded grassy areas to spawn where the sun heats
up the shallow waters.
To lower the temperature, one just decreases the setting
on the submersible heater until it can be turned off. To
further lower the temperature one might ventilate the room
or put an ice block in the tank.
- Change in water depth
Lower the water level to 25% of normal during the dry
season. Increase it to normal level over a couple of days
when the rainy season begins.
- Spawning sites become available
Change the plants and decorations. If gravel is not used,
plant plants in pots and move caves and roots to make a
new environment more suitable for spawning.
- Changes in the light
- Light intensity: With several bulbs on the tank, it's
easy to turn off all but one (or perhaps use only
daylight). Another way might be to put paper between the
hood and the cover glass.
- Light duration: At the equator the duration of light is
about 12-14 hours year round. The further from the equator
the larger difference between the seasons. Shorten by 1-2
hours in both morning and evening. Use a timer!
- Light angle: Hard to simulate in the tank.
- Increased plant plankton level
Not possible to simulate easily in the tank, but one might
try infusoria. Even if this does not stimulate spawning it
might be a good first food for certain species with very
small fry.
- Right time of the year
Wild caught fish might require that it should be rainy
season time in the area from where they come, for them to
spawn in our tanks. Check exactly where the species comes
from and when the rainy season occurs there. Captive bred
fish have generally had their sense of when it is the
rainy season and when it is not reduced, and might often
be bred year round. The same could be true for young fish
that are wild caught. If they have not experienced a rainy
season it might be easier to breed them at a different
time than when they normally spawn in nature.
- Other fish spawning
Let an easily bred species spawn in the same tank as the
more difficult one. This works as a natural hormone
treatment. An alternative might be to let an easily
spawned species spawn in a separate tank, and add water
from it to the difficult species' tank.
- Sound
Add water through a plexi-glass plate with lots of very
small holes. The drops that fall through simulate the rain
beating on the water surface.
Further ideas that are used by breeders are:
- Filter over limestone during the simulated rainy
season. This does make the water harder, but it might be
the change in water chemistry that makes certain species
spawn.
- Move the well-fed fish from a tank without optimum
conditions (no spawning substrate, "wrong" water
parameters, many fish that are "disturbing", etc.) to a
tank with the right conditions for spawning. The move
itself together with all the changes that occur might get
the fish to spawn (good way to breed many tetras).
Suggestions for a breeding scheme:
Preparations and tips:
Choose a tank of the right size for the species in
question. The tank should have a volume that will be enough
when only 25% of the aquarium is filled with water. The most
important issue is that the oxygen level is kept high enough
without filter and air stones. Arrange for hiding places and
a few plants. The tank should simulate the end of the
dry season.
- Bottom substrate
Whether to use bottom material or not can be debated.
The most common is to have some kind of gravel, but peat
or filter floss can be used. When a bottom material is
used it will help increase the surface for good bacteria
to multiply.
Advantages of bottom material:
- Some species prefer a dark bottom, others a pale
one. Some pale Corydoras prefer a pale bottom.
- Many species "like" to probe around in the bottom
for food.
- Less risk of fungus attack on bottom dwelling fry
(e.g. Corydoras).
- Eggs that fall to the bottom are harder for the
parents to find and eat.
- No reflections from the bottom.
Disadvantages of bottom material:
- Difficult to see if all food has been eaten.
- Difficult to clean without vacuuming out sand/peat.
- If you don't know how the fish spawn you have to set
up the tank with a little of everything. The plants can be
varied with large leafed plants (Java fern,
Echinodorus, Anubias, and Hydrocotyle), fine
leafed (Myriophyllum, Cabomba, and
Egeria), narrow leafed (Vallisneria) and
other (Java moss, Najas). Large plants can be
planted in pots for easy removal. Use roots, plastic pipes
of different diameters, etc. Plastic plants can be used
instead of live ones. These can be easily disinfected and
be cleaned of snails etc.
- The tank should be filled with water from the tank
where the fish were before, and have the same temperature.
Make sure the water has been recently changed (low nitrite
and nitrate levels).
- A filter with adjustable flow should be used.
- The light hood should be able to give a high light
level.
- The heater should be mounted along the bottom, yet be
easy to adjust. Make sure it's a good quality heater that
can be fully submerged.
- Cover the sides and top with paper to avoid scaring
the fish when you are moving about in the room.
- Do not feed white or black mosquito larvae before the
spawning attempt.
- Make sure you have peat (black peat is preferable),
alder cones, leaves, peat extract or whatever you want to
use. Make sure that the carbonate hardness is at about 2-3
kH to avoid too low pH levels when you add the peat etc.
- Choose healthy and mature animals with the right ratio
of males to females depending on the species, and put them
in the breeding tank. They should be well fed, to be able
to survive a two-week dry season period.
Simulation Scheme
End of rainy season:
Still some food, and the water level has not started to
lower.
Day 1. Feed about 1/10 of normal. The lights
should now have a level between full power and "cloudy",
about 14 hours. Filter running at full speed.
Day 2. Lower the water level about 10%, feed
1/10 of normal. Add some calcium carbonate and magnesium
sulphate to raise total and carbonate hardness 1 degree
each. (An alternative is to take out 20% of the water and
add half the amount with hard tap water if that's
available.) Add a dose of plant fertiliser according to
instructions for your product (gives more dissolved salts
in the water).
Day 3. Lower the water level about 10%, skip
feeding. Increase the temperature about one degree.
Day 4. Lower the water level about 10%. Increase
total and carbonate hardness 1 degree each. Feed 1/10 of
normal. Put peat, alder comes, leaves, etc. in the water.
Tannins etc. will be leached from these items over the
coming days.
Beginning of the dry season:
Food supply decreases and ceases. Water level and current
decreases. Temperature of the remaining water increases.
Day 5. Lower the water level about 10%, skip
feeding. Increase the temperature about one degree.
Decrease the flow by adjusting the filter. Check pH.
Day 6. Lower the water level about 10%, feed
1/10 of normal.
Day 7. Lower the water level about 10%. Increase
total and carbonate hardness 1 degree each. Stop feeding
until day 21. Increase the temperature about one degree.
Day 8. Lower the water level about 10%.
Day 9. Lower the water level about 10%. Increase
total and carbonate hardness by 1 degree each. Shut off
air stones. Take out the filter and clean it. Let the
filter run in another tank so it has a working bacterial
culture when it's needed in a week.
Day 10. Lower the water level about 10%. The
water level should be down to 25% of the tank's capacity.
The temperature should be around 28 degrees. Put peat,
alder comes, leaves, etc. in the water. Add plant
fertiliser. Increase the lighting to max. Take away any
floating plants. Start an infusoria culture. Check pH.
Day 11-19. Leave the fish in peace.
Beginning of rainy season:
The first clouds can be seen in the sky but no rain has
started to fall.
Day 20. Clean the filter that has been working
in another tank. Decrease the lighting, both the intensity
and the length (down to about 10 hours). Take out the
peat, leaves etc. Check the pH.
First rainfall:
Day 21. Put the floating plants back in. Add
more plants of the type the fish like for spawning. Add
clean, as soft as possible, water (preferable RO), about
20% of the tank volume. The water's temperature should be
about 3 degrees lower than that of the tank. Put in the
filter and run it at half speed if possible. One could try
to turn off the light for a couple of hours in the middle
of the day to simulate thick clouds. Lower the heater
temperature by 2 degrees. Feed a little with mosquito
larvae and newly hatched brine shrimp. Add infusoria so
that the water gets a slight cloudiness.
Day 22. Add the equivalent of 20% of the tank
volume, with water about 5 degrees lower in temperature
than the tank. Run the filter at full speed and make it
"splash" in the surface. Lower the heater temperature by 2
degrees. Feed a lot and often. Add infusoria so that the
water gets a slight cloudiness. Add a vitamin product and
plant fertiliser according to instructions for your
product.
Day 23. Add the equivalent of 20% of the tank
volume. The water temperature should be about 5 degrees
lower than that of the tank. Add aeration at a low level.
Lower the heater temperature by 2 degrees. Feed a lot. Add
infusoria so that the water gets a slight cloudiness.
Day 24. Turn off the heater if the fish can take
such low temperatures. Aeration at half speed. Fill the
tank. The water temperature should be about 5 degrees
lower than that of the tank. If you can, open a window
during the night to lower the temp. further. Feed a lot.
Add infusoria so that the water gets a slight cloudiness.
Height of the rainy season:
Day 25. Aeration at full speed. Change 50% of
the water volume. Feed a lot.
Day 26-?. Carry on as Day 25 until they spawn!
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