ChatterBank0 min ago
pregnant fish
2 Answers
i have just made my pond and i have been given some gold fish and i was told one of them is pregnant. how would i know if this is true?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Fish lay eggs like most reptiles and so cannot become 'pregnant' like a mammal. When in breeding condition female fish become plump as they are full of eggs. When these are released at the bottom on the pond the male fish fertilises them.
See here under breeding
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_goldfish
See here under breeding
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_goldfish
Some fish indeed have live young but goldfish are members of the carp family and lay eggs. To encourage them to breed you need one female and two or three males. The female will only release her eggs among plants when a male pushes against her side and as she releases the eggs the male will release milt which mixes with the eggs and so fertilises them.
When the intense 'chasing' has lessened you can grab some of the plants where you've seen them breeding and put them in a bucket without lifting them out of the water, thus keeping the eggs in the same water.
Put the bucket under cover but not in the sun. If successful you will see very small needle-like babies hanging on the side of the bucket after a few days, which will start swimming two or three days later depending on the temperature.
Get some proper food from the petshop. Live food such as just hatched brine shrimps is best but hard to get. After 2 weeks take up to 100 or so of the biggest young and give the rest to friends. As the fish grow you need to keep splitting them up as when they are 1" you should not have more than 10 in a 2 gallon bucket or their growth will be stunned.
Have a go, it is lots of fun.
When the intense 'chasing' has lessened you can grab some of the plants where you've seen them breeding and put them in a bucket without lifting them out of the water, thus keeping the eggs in the same water.
Put the bucket under cover but not in the sun. If successful you will see very small needle-like babies hanging on the side of the bucket after a few days, which will start swimming two or three days later depending on the temperature.
Get some proper food from the petshop. Live food such as just hatched brine shrimps is best but hard to get. After 2 weeks take up to 100 or so of the biggest young and give the rest to friends. As the fish grow you need to keep splitting them up as when they are 1" you should not have more than 10 in a 2 gallon bucket or their growth will be stunned.
Have a go, it is lots of fun.