Retirement and forum shutdown (17 Jan 2022)
Hi,
John Howell who has managed the forum for years is getting on and wishes to retire from the role of managing it.
Over the years, he has managed the forum through good days and bad days and he has always been fair.
He has managed to bring his passion for fish keeping to the forum and keep it going for so long.
I wish to thank John for his hard work in keeping the forum going.
With John wishing to "retire" from the role of managing the forum and the forum receiving very little traffic, I think we must agree that forum has come to a natural conclusion and it's time to put it to rest.
I am proposing that the forum be made read-only from March 2022 onwards and that no new users or content be created. The website is still registered for several more years, so the content will still be accessible but no new topics or replies will be allowed.
If there is interest from the ITFS or other fish keeping clubs, we may redirect traffic to them or to a Facebook group but will not actively manage it.
I'd like to thank everyone over the years who helped with forum, posted a reply, started a new topic, ask a question and helped a newbie in fish keeping. And thank you to the sponsors who helped us along the away. Hopefully it made the hobby stronger.
I'd especially like to thank John Howell and Valerie Rousseau for all of their contributions, without them the forum would have never been has successful.
Thank you
Darragh Sherwin
refuses to spit
- john gannon (john gannon)
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john
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- dubfish (Alan Martin)
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Regards Alan..
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- christyg (Chris Geraghty)
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- derek (Derek Doyle)
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have stripped fish countless times over the years but would now avoid it except if necessary for the parents/fry health. i think it is a barbaric proccess and would only reccomend it as a last resort.
on occasions first time nervous mothers will hold fry too long to the detriment of all and on these occasions it is obviously the only option. tough bulletproof tropheus can usually be stripped without too much difficulty or stress but again it is best to let them spit in the main tank as the adults rarely harm even the tiniest fry.
also one of the main attractions when keeping mouthbrooders is the parental post release care.
anyway john, with the afra just let her release the fry naturally when shes ready.
30 tanks specialise in african cichlids, angelfish and various catfish
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- john gannon (john gannon)
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Hate doing it
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- Tom (Tom Brecknell)
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a good topic for debate john.
have stripped fish countless times over the years but would now avoid it except if necessary for the parents/fry health. i think it is a barbaric proccess and would only reccomend it as a last resort.
on occasions first time nervous mothers will hold fry too long to the detriment of all and on these occasions it is obviously the only option. tough bulletproof tropheus can usually be stripped without too much difficulty or stress but again it is best to let them spit in the main tank as the adults rarely harm even the tiniest fry.
also one of the main attractions when keeping mouthbrooders is the parental post release care.
anyway john, with the afra just let her release the fry naturally when shes ready.
Hi John,
I would agree with Derek 100% as there is a lot of experience behind what he is saying............Tom.
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- derek (Derek Doyle)
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Have found I have to strip my tropheus, only ever seen them spit once and i have had countless holding and never ended up with fry,
Hate doing it
les
are the tropheus in a species only tank as they normally dont molest their or even other species fry. one of the problems with the ritual stripping of fish through generations is that the normal (in the lake) behavior is lost and the stripped fry grow up to be poor parents. also fry of most herbivore mouthbrooders grow at a much faster rate when left with parents as i have found many times. so even if stripping is practised it is good to at least some of the time let natural behavior take place and if you must strip let it be as late as possible.
ps
how did the shelldweller and suspected worms situation work out.
30 tanks specialise in african cichlids, angelfish and various catfish
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- dubfish (Alan Martin)
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Derek,Ive being stripping on day 3 lately,and tumbling the eggs..with good success,would these eggs/fry turn out to be bad parents as well?
one of the problems with the ritual stripping of fish through generations is that the normal (in the lake) behavior is lost and the stripped fry grow up to be poor parents. also fry of most herbivore mouthbrooders grow at a much faster rate when left with parents as i have found many times. so even if stripping is practised it is good to at least some of the time let natural behavior take place and if you must strip let it be as late as possible.
Regards Alan..
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- derek (Derek Doyle)
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Derek,Ive being stripping on day 3 lately,and tumbling the eggs..with good success,would these eggs/fry turn out to be bad parents as well?
one of the problems with the ritual stripping of fish through generations is that the normal (in the lake) behavior is lost and the stripped fry grow up to be poor parents. also fry of most herbivore mouthbrooders grow at a much faster rate when left with parents as i have found many times. so even if stripping is practised it is good to at least some of the time let natural behavior take place and if you must strip let it be as late as possible.
hi alan, as you know there are differing views on this, but ime continiously stripping females does cause a loss of the natural parental behavior. it is also imo the case that stripped fry will often lack the skill
to brood successfully. most of the commercial tropheus breeders use wild fish as they are always solid breeders with strong broods, they strip early and breed and rebreed and then the dealer sells or moves on the spent adults and starts with new wild stock. the stripped fry grow up and are generally inconsistent parents. that is probably why f1 tropheus are so abundant and so called wilds can sometimes be relatively cheaply bought. older tropheus are rarely commercially valued due to hyperdominance, lower fecundity and bad parenting skills from repeated stripping (a bit like battery farmed hens).
30 tanks specialise in african cichlids, angelfish and various catfish
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- john gannon (john gannon)
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thanks for all replies and lets keep this topic going as it is interesting to hear what people think regarding stripping or not
john
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- andrewo (andrew)
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Back to topic; i have never strippped any of my malawis before.
regards
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- Tom (Tom Brecknell)
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came home last night and noticed she only seemed to have half a moutful of fry so went and moved a rock and filter and there they were ,this morning she had finally spit the rest.there is about 30 fry that seem quite big but a bit skinny if yoyu know what i mean.
thanks for all replies and lets keep this topic going as it is interesting to hear what people think regarding stripping or not
john
That's great news, if she "seemed to have half a moutful of fry" it might be that her jaws are still stretched from carrying so many fry and her mouth is actually empty. Just a thought............Tom

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- derek (Derek Doyle)
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.there is about 30 fry that seem quite big but a bit skinny if yoyu know what i mean.
john
young and/or insecure females often hold too long and this can lead to skinny fry as only a few mouthbrooding species, ie tropheus, continue to feed while holding. however, the fry will quickly add bulk and catch up with good feeding.
some species frontosa most haps etc. spit the fry and take them back in at any sign of danger and at lights out, for a week or so, while others careleus etc. dont.
as tom points out older mouthbrooders can get a droopy or stretched mouth/jaw, which will give the appearance of brooding.
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I have 30 Tropheus (28 females to 2 males, 20 wild caught 10 juvives) and 2 Tanganicodus irsacae Ive had countless holding and never got any fry until i started striping them, I have on occasion found the remains of some fry.
Last week for the first time ever I found three fry in the tank but I think the female may have spit them as i was cleaning the tank hate stripping them as a i can only imagine how stressful it is for them
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how did the shelldweller and suspected worms situation work out.
Think it was down to cheap brine shrimp eggs, stopped feeding them for 4 days and put them on a fix of NLS and frozen brine shrimp, seems to have done the job no more white pooh
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- derek (Derek Doyle)
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sometimes if she dos'nt feel the environment is safe a female will refuse to release fry naturally to the detriment of all, and in such cases stripping is a last resort. but only by practised and experienced fishkeepers.
if we must strip and sometimes it is probably necessary, then it is best to leave it as late as possible when the fry are about ready to be released and to keep hands wet and/or use a wet soft cloth. as tropheus are tough and have big lips they are among the easiest fish to strip. females then return to the fray to be immediately hunted down by the dominant males, but unlike most other species, they are ready very soon to spawn again.
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- Gedas (Gediminas Derkintis)
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- derek (Derek Doyle)
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