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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

Aplochelius lineatus, A wolf in sheep's clothing.

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29 May 2010 19:31 - 29 May 2010 19:34 #1 by Puddlefish (Colin McCourt)
Hi,
This subject has been brought to my attention more times than I care to remember. The story would always be something along the lines of "Why have all my neons dissapeared" and when they revealed the rest of their tank inhabitants it was no suprise that Aplochelius lineatus was on that list. (mostly the Gold colour morph). These fish look very inviting to the ill informed aquarist when he or she spies them in their LFS tanks. Usually available around the 40mm size. Admitadily they do look stunning under the correct conditions. But beware all is not what it seems, this gentle giant stalks its prey and any small tetra is fair game. Due to the continuing sucession of similar posts I have decided to put pen to paper once more to cataloge the general care and maintainence of this beautiful Killifish.

Aplocheilus lineatus (Striped Panchax)




General
Aplocheilus lineatus is a fairly large robust killi which comes from the coastal/mid areas of India and Sri Lanka. There have been many colour forms circulating within the hobby of late, most notably is the "Gold" variety. This is the most common form found in our tanks today as it has a more striking colouration than the natural true striped variety.
Its natural habitat is varied as it is found in high altitude rivers, streams and reservoirs equally it is also common in lower lying lakes and paddy fields, it too has adapted to brackish conditions. This fish is very adaptable and its perhaps this trait that makes it easy to keep and breed in the home aquarium.
As I've already mentioned this is a quite large toothcarp which dwells on the surface waiting for an easy meal, it has been used quite sucessfully for mosquito control.
It should be kept in an aquarium no smaller than 90cms and will do quite well in water with a neutral pH, slightly soft and a temperature around 22-25'C. They can get to around 10cms in the home aquarium given the space and a varied diet which should always include some live varieties.

Colouration
Aplo lineatus possess a body shape thats indicitive of most of the genus, a body shape that is elongated and a turned up mouth region. The fins are round in shape and the back is slightly arched. The back has a bronze colouration and this becomes bronze to bronze/olive green on the flanks. Every other scale has a metallic Yellow/Gold appearance giving it a glow of irredescence The gill and head area is a yellowish white colour. The body also possesses nine black indistinctive stripes varying in depth and shade. In recent years there has been many colour variants on show ranging from the natural striped variety to captive bred Gold form. In the gold form all or most of the males scales are metallic yellow. Some of the other variants have more red colouration in the unpaired fins.

Sex & Breeding
Sometimes sexing this species can be a bit difficult, But in general the males are larger and a bright yellow and the females are smaller and a lot paler. The males also have longer more pointed anal fins, while the females fins are slightly rounded. The males also have fainter transversebands whilst the females bars are slightly more pronounced and a little wider. Sexing can also be performed by bagging the fish and shining a torch under the fishes abdomen. In the females belly region you should be able to spot egg sacs.
This fish is very easy to breed and rear and even the complete killifish novice should have little or no trouble rearing a batch of these beautiful fish to adulthood. They will even breed in the community tank (conditions apply when keeping with smaller fishes)
But for a more fruitful breeding program I afford my fish with a tank of 18"X10"X10" (7.79 gallons US or 6.49 UK)
The water should be slightly soft and acidic with a pH of around 6.7
This tank should have no decoration except for an air driven sponge filter, Heater/Stat set to 25'C and some man made floating mops (large)
www.irishfishkeepers.com/cms/component/o...ew/catid,7/id,72173/
I would always employ a ratio of one male to two females (Seperated and fully conditioned, fed with live foods for about a week prior) into a setup like this.
The male will constantly chase the females into the mops, where they will lay and fertilise a single egg each time.

Eggs and Fry Rearing
Aplo. lineatus eggs are very large and you can either collect the eggs on a daily basis or leave them in the breeding tank and remove the parents after about a week.
I like to collect the eggs, I do this on a daily basis when breeding such species. I use margarine tubs floated in the parent tank with a water depth of around 40mm. The eggs will be quite large for a killifish and opaque/whitish in colour. They are quite hard to the touch and can whthstand handling very well. I place around a dozen eggs in each tub and provide the tub with an airline set to a slow trickle. The eggs beging to go through many cell dividing processes over the period o 10-14 days whereby they hatch into perfectly formed fish fry. They now will be looking for a meal. Being fairly large fry lineatus can accept newly hatched brineshrimp from the outset coupled with microworm and finley crushed fish flakes. I feed around 3 times per day, dont over feed as that small body of water will soon foul and you will lose fry. They wont present any problems on that score, but as always keep the fry tubs clean and change 10-20% of their water daily.
A handy tool I like to use for keeping fry tubs clean is a syringe coupled to a piece of ordinary airline.
They will grow quickly given the above rearing methods. Then I would move them on to 1lb Ice Cream cartons and continue feeding as above maybe include some Grindalworm into their diet. With fry development going on at different rates provision must be provided to size grading within the tubs to help curtail sibling rivalry.
After this its plain sailing and move them on to a larger rearing tank proper. I would ween out the runts at this stage and discard.


Summary
This is a beautiful if quite large Killifish sp. I particularly like the Wild form but most of you may encounter the Gold form more often these days as it will have more of a commercial value to the LFS. Either way its nice Beginners killifish to start you on the road within this particular niche in fishkeeping. One species all killiifish enthuiasts should keep and breed atleast once. Always bear in mind that this species is a fairly large predator and will take any small fish as food. It posesses a cavernous mouth that can open quite wide to consume such prey. So be wary when you see this beautiful species in dealers tanks, think before you buy. It is truely a "Wolf in Sheeps clothing"

Breeding Overview
Nice easy Killi to get the beginner used to breeding techniques. They present no real problems in all aspects of their husbandry
Tank size: 18"x10"x10"
Decor: Adults - bare tank with floating mops, Fry - Java Moss
Water: Fairly Soft 80 ppm - pH 6.6 - 6.8
Temperature: 25'C
Waterchanges: Bi Daily (10%) for breeders and Daily (10-20%) for fry.
Filtration: Air driven sponge filters set to a trickle.
Feeding: little and often especially fry, remember to syphon off uneaten food.
Lighting: no artificial lighting.


Remember

A tight fitting lid or coverglass is essential

Thank you for taking the time to read through this long and informative article, I hope it will help someone starting out to keep killifish and also hobbyists who are having difficulity with this species.
Regards
C
Last edit: 29 May 2010 19:34 by Puddlefish (Colin McCourt).

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29 May 2010 20:37 #2 by Fishowner (Gavin fishowner)
I kept Fundulopanchax gardneri gardneri - Steel-blue Killifish, and I found them to be the most aggressive smaller type fish Ive encountered. They wiped alot of my tank in the space of 2 days,literally saw a 2 month old guppy fry hanging out of its mouth trying to get away from the killifish.Lunatics,rehoused them to another tank and they were more behaved with bigger inhabitants!
Stunning fish though.
Gavin

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29 May 2010 20:50 #3 by JohnH (John)
The Lineatus definitely is Pike-shaped, and an equally efficient predator too, all fins being set to the rear of the fish suggest rapid acceleration - just as with the Pike - they, apart from the dreadful 'Golden' morph have long been a favourite of mine.
John

Location:
N. Tipp

We're just two lost souls swimming in a fish bowl - year after year.


ITFS member.



It's a long way to Tipperary.

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29 May 2010 21:09 #4 by Sofiztikated (Kenny Gibson)
Beautiful fish.

I had just been speaking with Puddlefish/Colin about aplo. panchax, and they're very similar.

Hoping to keep these (or panchax) again very soon.

Well written again, Colin.

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30 May 2010 00:30 #5 by platty252 (Darren Dalton)
Another great write up Colin.

I meant to talk to yourself at the show about lineatus cross breeding. But the small section of my brain that dose the thinking had shriveled by that time.

I will come back to this post tomorrow and trow some questions at you. I just need to do some photos first.

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30 May 2010 13:17 - 30 May 2010 13:21 #6 by Puddlefish (Colin McCourt)

I meant to talk to yourself at the show about lineatus cross breeding.


Filthy words, Hybridisation... one of my pet hates. Wash your mouth out sir...
And with that little ditty, I bring up my 100th post... I'm officially a guppy. :ohmy:
Last edit: 30 May 2010 13:21 by Puddlefish (Colin McCourt).

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31 May 2010 00:22 #7 by platty252 (Darren Dalton)
I didn't cross these on purpose and found it odd (at the time) that they did.
The male is Aplocheilus lineatus but i have no info of where he came from. He is very much like the aquarium strain you see in the shops but the gold isnt as vibrant.

Sorry for the bad pictures.
Male.


I have a female for him but he is not interested in her. He only chases her away in favour for a A. lineatus "Goa" female.
My understanding was Aplocheilus dont interbreed and if they did the young would be all female and/or sterile.
Anyone i asked about this danced around the question and i got no straight answers. In fact i got no answers at all. Well apart from "sell them as aquarium strain" which i dont intend doing.
I have kept a couple of young just for observation.

Female A.lineatus "Goa"


The few young that survived were all female except one male.
I havent gone as far as to see if they are sterile or not.

Young male and female.


Any info on this subject would be greatly appreciated.

Darren.

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31 May 2010 19:06 - 31 May 2010 19:07 #8 by Puddlefish (Colin McCourt)
My understanding is, that you are saying that you have Aplocheilus lineatus.
I would suggest that it don't matter where they are from geographically "Goa" or otherwise, they will breed as they are the same species, only separated by location or colour var.
I have not gone into studying this myself and to give you an honest answer "I simply dont know" but I have heard reports of crossing ie. Aplocheilus dayi x werneri
I don't like hybridisation I cant see there's any point in it. Some things turn out to be abominations.
I like to accept the wild versions for what they are. There seems to be no escape for colour enhancing fish species these days. I can look over Goldfish and Koi but killifish, Apistogrammas etc I have a major problem with. But hey Ho each to his own...
Sorry I couldn't give you a more definitive answer.
Regards
C
Last edit: 31 May 2010 19:07 by Puddlefish (Colin McCourt).

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31 May 2010 22:09 - 31 May 2010 22:15 #9 by Xeon (ioan micu)
Last edit: 31 May 2010 22:15 by Xeon (ioan micu).

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31 May 2010 22:14 #10 by dar (darren curry)
more like a little whale shark

Check out the angling section, it is fantastic

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31 May 2010 22:24 #11 by platty252 (Darren Dalton)
Ok thanks for that Colin.
Just to clarify i did not cross these on purpose.
I also disagree with hybrids or any other method of creating unnatural fish.

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