| ARTICLE INFORMATION: Author: Tom and Pat Bridges Title: Anableps anableps - Part 4 - Care and Feeding Summary: A definitive article for the keeping of these four-eyed wonders. Part four explains the importance of a high protein diet, brackish water, and excellent water parameters needed to keep Anableps. Contact for editing purposes: theo@aquarticles.com email: tp.bridges@sympatico.ca Date first published: October 1999 Publication:The Scat, St Catharines Aquarium Society, c/o http://www3.sympatico.ca/tp.bridges/home.html Reprinted from Aquarticles: |
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Anableps anableps - Part 4 - Care and Feeding By Tom and Pat Bridges
If male Anableps are only interested in eating and mating, females seem to
have just one thing on their minds - eating. In nature they often inhabit the brackish
waters in the estuaries of rivers along the coasts of northern South America and eastern
Central America, so they probably live on a diet mainly of insects, worms, crustaceans,
and plankton. In our tanks they appear to be constantly hungry and, if not given an ample
quanitity of protein-rich foods, they usually develop spinal deforamties and show poor
growth.
Taking the brine shrimp straight from the baster Spoon feeding Ours have always loved freeze-dried plankton, thawed, frozen brine shrimp, live
wingless fruit flies and our homemade concoction of fish, clams, beef heart, shrimp and
veggies (Baby vitamins are stirred in just before feeding). With patience they can even be
trained to take food from a turkey baster or a spoon. There's very little that they won't
eat and, although floating food is desirable, if the tank isn't too deep they will paddle
down and scavenge from the bottom as well.
A female looking for leftovers
Baby Anableps can even be fed by hand and will nibble shrimp from your fingers
Babies will also dive for food
Like
their parents, babies enjoy a place to rest near the surface Bably "bleps" are large enough to eat almost all the same things as their
parents. Sometimes we left them in the tank with adults and they survived but, although
the adults don't deliberately harm the babies, they don't provide any parental care
either. We usually set up the young with their own tank so they didn't have to compete so
strenuously for food. It was great fun to observe them carefully and even to
"spoil" them with tasty bits like brine shrimp nauplii.
With good care and feeding Anableps grow
fast and produce lots and lots of waste (ammonia) All of this feeding meant lots of cleaning and water changes to avoid any build-up of
ammonia. The ideal tank temperature for Anableps seems to be 86 F (30 C), although some
hobbysists keep them a bit cooler. Just keep in mind that they come from an area where the
water temperature is consistently warm. Warm brackish water and ammonia make a deadly
combination. In addition to good filtration and frequent water changes, we highly
recommend that some ammonia-absorbing compound or resin be used. It can be as simple as
adding it to a small box filter which can be set bubbling away in a corner of the tank,
but don't forget to renew it at least once a month.
To provide hard, alkaline water with good
filtration in these shallow
A split clay pot covered by layers of slate
or flat rock ws used
About 1 heaping tablespoon of a good grade
of marine salt was added for
A heater was adjusted to 30 C, some
substrate from a healthy, established Anableps seem to be colour sensitive. Pat had a tourquoise housecoat that inspired fireworks-like panic in a tank of Anableps. We assumed it must have meant "big predatory bird" in their lanugage! Be prepared for surprises. Anableps are aware of the "out-of-tank" environment and may react strongly to the presence of strangers. This happens whe you want a visitor to see them. When seriously frightened, Anableps usually tuck themselves into a corner or sit on the bottom of the tank. Theymay also turn quite dark, almost black. This colour, if it persists, can also be an indicator of poor health. They are also susceptible to bacterial skin infections which are hard to cure. Antibiotics may work, but prevention (excellent water quality), is always far better. With luck we've had some that have lived 4 to 5 years and brought us joy.
Anableps - Part 1 - Eyes explained |