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African Cichlids and Plants

Keeping African Cichlids in Harmony

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Reducing African Cichlid Aggression

Why African Cichlids

 

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All you Ever Wanted to Know about Water Hardness

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Controlling Algae by Controlling Phosphate

Do I Need a Quarantine Tank?

Healthy Fish Tips: 5 Easy Ways to Keep Your Fish Healthy

How to Properly Maintain your Aquarium

Old Tank Syndrome

Recycling a Used Aquarium from a Garage Sale

Repairing a Leaky Aquarium

Simple Tips for a Healthy Aquarium

Summer Health Tips for Aquarium Fish

The Science of pH

 

AQUARIUMS HELPING PEOPLE

Aquariums for Insomniacs

 

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Designing a Planted Aquarium

How to Make a Moss and Shrimp Planted Aquarium

Tropical Aquarium Plants for Beginners

 

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A Primer on Fish Foods

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Start your Aquarium with Success

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The Ten Commandments of Fishkeeping

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Tropical Fish Species for Beginners

Twelve Quick Aquarium Tips for Beginners

Why Fish?

 

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Aquarium Decoration

Decorating Your Aquarium

How to Determine the Amount of Substrate Needed for an Aquarium

Making Your Aquarium Look Like Home

 

FISH BREEDING ARTICLES

Betta Splendens: General Information and Breeding

Breeding Crayfish

Breeding Gouramis

Breeding Oscars

Breeding Tetra Fish Successfully

Guppy Breeding for Experts

Mouthbrooding 101

When and How to Strip African Cichlid Eggs: Step by Step How to Instructions

 

FISH DISEASES ARTICLES

Dropsy

Fin Rot

Fungal Infections of the Mouth

Fungus (Saprolegnia)

Hexamita

Hole in the Head disease (HITH)

Swim Bladder Problems

Tuberculosis

Velvet or Rust

 

GENERAL CICHLID ARTICLES

Your First Cichlid Aquarium

 

INVERTEBRATE ARTICLES

Freshwater Snails

 

MARINE FISH ARTICLES

Beginning Saltwater

Marine Species NOT For The Beginner

 

NATIVE FISH ARTICLES

Successfully Spawning and Raising the Green Sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus)

The Native Aquarium

 

NEW WORLD CICHLID ARTICLES

All About Oscar Fish

Convict Cichlid

Firemouth Meeki Information

Good Tank Mates for Oscars

How to Determine the Sex of Discus Fish

Oscar Care Basics

You Can Keep Discus Too!

 

POND CARE ARTICLES

All About Dissolved Oxygen

pH Explained

Pond Water Chemistry

 

TERRARIUM ARTICLES

Hermit Crab Cages

 

TROPICAL FISH ARTICLES

Betta Splendens: Caring for your little fighter

General Cichlid Information

Green Spotted Puffer Profile

Guppies 101

How to Increase Your Fishkeeping Fun

Miniature Aquariums

Ten Tips for Caring for Your Betta Fish

The Pictus Catfish: The Fish That Needs A Shave?!

What Exactly are Plecos?

 

 

  Breeding Oscars

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The Oscars, or Astronotus ocellatus, from Cichlidae family, are fairly easy fish to breed. All you need is pretty much leaving them alone and letting them do their thing if you lucky enough to get a pair. If not, breeding might be very hard. They are a very long-lived fish, probably one of the reasons they are so popular today. Originally from Amazon.

 

Oscar Fish obviously requires a large tank due to their large size. They prefer clean and clear water with a deep sand bottom, and a few large rocks. If you keep plants with you Oscars they will be dug up however there are some people that believe that Oscars like to have plants that they can dig up in the aquarium and this might be true since many large cichlid like to have toys when kept in aquariums not to get bored. And since Oscars are large and very smart cichlids, you can actually teach them tricks, they might want something to do like digging up plant.

 

Be careful, they are enthusiastic eaters and they love to eat smaller fish. Thus, only keep them with other fish that are of the same size. Temperature is important, and should be kept stable somewhere in 79-86°F range. Feeding Oscars is not a problem since they will take every food you give, including flake frozen fish, prawns, pellets, earth worms, crickets, kitchen scrapes…and of course live food.

 

 

The most trying task to do is finding a mating pair. If your Oscar is adult in size, it becomes a really trial-and-error process. However once they form pairs they will stay together for the rest of their life. Probably the most common and effective method of finding pair of Oscars is to buy 6 or 8 young specimens (about 1 inch in length), and allowing them to grow up together. A mating pair can be identified from their mating play, which is a seemingly aggressive behavior towards each other; lip-locking, tail-slapping…. If one of the fish is overly aggressive, and it is a one-sided aggression and you should separate them or risk loosing one of them.

 

During their spawning process, they will use their mouths to clean a flat rock, and the female will lay her eggs there. Not all the eggs are laid at once; the female will take breathers, at which time the male moves in and fertilizes the eggs. A female usually lays 1,000-2,000 eggs. The eggs are opaque at first, turning transparent in 24 hours. After the eggs are laid, both parents watch over the eggs, wafting the eggs with their fin and guarding them against predators. Occasionally they take the eggs in their mouth, which keeps them clean and turns up bad eggs, which are then destroyed.

 

If a constant tank temperature is maintained, the eggs should hatch in about 36 hours. At first, the fry cannot swim, but they squirm "en masse" on the rock, living off the egg sac, for about 4 days. The parents constantly attend to their young at this time. Feeding these fry is easier than other breeds, because of the baby Oscar's relatively large size. A good and simple plan is to crush regular processed flake food in your fingers, and just drop it in. Turn off filtration during fry feeding time to make it easier for them to find their bits of food.

How the parents act towards their fry depends entirely on each fish personality. Some have numerous spawn and never bother their fry; others easily eat their young. To be on the safe side, you can separate the fry from their parents. However I do not recommend this until the parents have had a few unsuccessful spawnings. The fry will reach 1.5 to 2 inches after 12 weeks at which time they can be sold.

 

 

By Keith Pardee

 

 

 

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