We bougt a group of 5 L129s this time last year, we have fed them well and following on from the sexing topic it looks like 2 females 1 male and 2 undecideds...
The leaving the to it approach hasn't worked up to now, so its time to put the effort in
Last weekend I raised the temp to about 29ºc. They have been out and about loads more - its been great
Mid week I added 4 move 'caves' (to the 3 already in there) 2 of them are now in caves
Last night I did a 25% RO change.
What else can I do to help them along? feeding program?
Click For Our Plecs
[url=http://www.smithrc.f2s.com/gallery/plecs][img]http://www.smithrc.f2s.com/assorted/PlecSig_sm.jpg[/img][/url]
If you have breeding ready feamales, continuing Ro-water changes will get them spawn soon or a later. I think that you can raise the tempetature to 30.
Temperature can drop after the water changes 30 to 26 i think that will also work.
I have done Ro-tap water changes every other days when i will them spawn, this works with L-66 and L-46, L-46 has spawn once this week and another is now starting
Ro water is definately the way to go, you really need to have water with a low conductivity/TDS for things to start happening. I pretty much do as Arctic does with the tap water RO mix.
Arctic, do you find that your PH is stable with a conductivity of 120 ms?
Without getting too technical a conductivity meter will measure how conductive your water is by passing a tiny current between two electrodes. The more dissolved substances in the water the higher the reading, however it will only pickup ions that have either a positive or negative charge. A lot of "neutral" non-charged pollutants/substances such as pesticides and other organic compounds will not be detected. They are still a very useful tool for measuring overall water quality in aquaria but please bear in mind that they do not provide a "true" picture of water quality. A TDS meter is pretty much the same thing as a conductivity meter all it does is convert the microsiemens conductivity reading into parts per million.
It's worth considering a conductivity/TDS meter that has been factory calibrated. Recalibration will then be by pressing a reset button to restore the factory default setting as opposed to messing around with calibration solutions, just a thought.