Raising Fry Successfully
Raise healthy baby fish! Fry tank setup, feeding schedules, live foods, and species-specific care.
zucht · 8 Min. Lesezeit · fry, breeding, baby fish, raising
Raising Fry Successfully
Raising fry (baby fish) requires specific care, feeding, and setup. Here's how to maximize survival rates for both egg-layers and livebearers.
Types of Fry
Livebearers (Born as Free-Swimming Fry)
Examples: Guppies, Mollies, Platies, Swordtails
Advantages:
- Fry are independent immediately
- No egg care needed
- Larger fry (easier to feed)
Egg Scatterers (Hatch from Eggs)
Examples: Tetras, Rasboras, Barbs, Danios
Process:
- Parents scatter eggs on substrate/plants
- Eggs hatch in 24-72 hours (species-dependent)
- Fry absorb yolk sac for 2-5 days
- Free-swimming stage begins
Challenge: Tiny fry need microscopic food (infusoria, green water)
Egg Guarders (Parents Protect Eggs/Fry)
Examples: Cichlids (Angelfish, Rams, Discus), Bettas
Process:
- Parents lay eggs on surface (leaf, rock, cave)
- Parents guard and fan eggs (provide oxygen)
- Eggs hatch in 2-3 days
- Parents may guard fry for weeks
Tip: Some parents eat fry eventually — remove fry or parents when aggression appears.
Setting Up a Fry Tank
Tank Size:
- Small batches (10-30 fry): 20-40L tank
- Large batches (50+ fry): 80-150L tank
Why separate tank?
- Adults eat fry
- Easier to feed (no competition)
- Better water quality control
Equipment:
1. Sponge Filter (Essential!)
Why?
- Gentle filtration (won't suck up fry)
- Provides surface area for biofilm (fry food)
- Quiet
Powered by air pump (quieter models: Eheim, Tetra Whisper)
2. Heater
Temperature: 26-28°C (warmer = faster growth)
Use adjustable heater (50-100W for small fry tanks)
3. Gentle Lighting
6-8 hours daily (moderate light)
Avoid intense light (stresses fry)
4. Bare Bottom or Fine Sand
Bare bottom:
- Easier to clean
- Easier to see uneaten food
Fine sand:
- More natural
- Good for fry that forage
Avoid gravel (waste gets trapped)
5. Hiding Spots
Use:
- Java moss
- Guppy grass
- Water Sprite (floating)
- Spawning mops
Fry feel safer with cover = less stress, better growth.
Feeding Fry (Most Critical!)
Fry have tiny mouths and need SMALL, FREQUENT meals.
Fry Food Options by Size
Newly Hatched Fry (Egg-Layers, Day 1-5):
1. Infusoria (Microorganisms)
- Harvest from aged tank water, plant cultures
- How to culture: Put lettuce/spinach in jar of aged tank water, leave in sunlight for 3-5 days (water becomes cloudy with microorganisms)
2. Green Water (Algae-Rich Water)
- Jar of tank water + sunlight = green algae bloom
- Add small amounts to fry tank daily
3. Liquid Fry Food (Commercial)
- Hikari First Bites
- Sera Micron
- Convenient but less nutritious than live food
Small Fry (Egg-Layers Week 1-2, Livebearers Day 1+):
1. Baby Brine Shrimp (BBS) — BEST FOOD!
- Hatch brine shrimp eggs (24 hours)
- High protein, perfect size
- Boosts growth and color
How to hatch BBS:
- Add 1 tablespoon salt per liter (brackish water)
- Add 1/4 teaspoon brine shrimp eggs
- Strong aeration
- 24 hours at 25-28°C
- Harvest with light (shrimp swim toward it)
2. Microworms
- Culture in oatmeal + yeast
- Ready in 3-5 days
- Climb jar sides (easy to harvest)
3. Vinegar Eels
- Culture in apple cider vinegar
- Last weeks
- Perfect size for tiny fry
4. Finely Crushed Flakes
- Grind high-quality flakes into powder
- Less nutritious than live food
Growing Fry (Week 3+):
1. Baby Brine Shrimp (still the best!)
2. Crushed Flakes / Micro Pellets
- Hikari First Bites
- Fluval Bug Bites Fry
3. Frozen Daphnia / Cyclops (finely chopped)
4. Grindal Worms (small white worms)
Feeding Schedule
Week 1-2 (Critical Growth Phase):
- Feed 4-6× daily
- Small amounts each time
- Remove uneaten food after 5 minutes
Week 3-4:
- Feed 3-4× daily
- Gradually increase portion sizes
Week 5+:
- Feed 2-3× daily
- Standard fry food (crushed flakes, micro pellets)
Golden Rule: Feed small amounts often > large meals infrequently
Water Quality for Fry
Fry are MORE sensitive to poor water than adults!
Daily Maintenance:
- Siphon uneaten food (turkey baster works well)
- 10-20% water changes (small, daily changes better than large weekly)
Weekly Maintenance:
- Test ammonia/nitrite (must be 0!)
- Clean sponge filter (rinse in old tank water only)
Temperature-Match Water!
Cold water = shock = death
How:
- Heat water to match tank temp (use heater in bucket)
- Add slowly to avoid disturbing fry
Growth Stages
Week 1-2: Critical Stage
- Survival: High mortality if water quality poor or food insufficient
- Size: 3-6mm
- Feeding: 4-6× daily, live foods preferred
Week 3-4: Rapid Growth
- Size: 1-1.5cm
- Feeding: 3-4× daily
- Signs of health: Active swimming, hunting for food, rounded bellies
Week 5-8: Juvenile Stage
- Size: 1.5-3cm
- Feeding: 2-3× daily
- Color development starts (especially in livebearers)
Week 8-12: Pre-Adult
- Size: 3-4cm (species-dependent)
- Can be moved to grow-out tank or sold
- Sexing possible (livebearers)
Common Fry Problems
1. High Mortality in First Week
Causes:
- Starvation (food too large or infrequent)
- Poor water quality
- Temperature shock
Solution:
- Feed smaller, more frequent meals
- Daily 10% water changes
- Use infusoria/BBS for egg-layer fry
2. Stunted Growth
Causes:
- Underfeeding
- Overcrowding
- Poor water quality
Solution:
- Feed more often
- Move to larger tank (1L per fry minimum)
- Increase water changes
3. Fry Dying After Water Changes
Cause: Temperature or parameter shock
Solution:
- Match temperature exactly
- Smaller, more frequent water changes (10-20% daily)
- Drip-acclimate new water
4. Fry Not Eating
Causes:
- Food too large
- Stress (too much light, flow, or activity)
- Illness
Solution:
- Offer smaller food (infusoria, BBS)
- Reduce light, cover tank partially
- Observe for disease symptoms
5. Fungus on Eggs (Egg-Layers)
Cause: Infertile eggs rot and grow fungus
Solution:
- Remove white/fuzzy eggs immediately
- Add methylene blue (antifungal, safe for eggs)
- Increase aeration (prevents fungus spread)
Species-Specific Tips
Guppy / Molly / Platy Fry:
- Born large, easy to feed (crushed flakes, BBS)
- Can eat immediately
- Fast-growing (adult in 8-12 weeks)
Betta Fry:
- Extremely tiny (need infusoria first week)
- Father guards bubble nest (remove after fry free-swimming)
- Need labyrinth access to surface (lower water level)
- Feed live foods only (BBS, microworms)
Angelfish / Discus Fry:
- Parents produce "discus milk" (skin secretion fry eat)
- Can leave with parents for 2-3 weeks
- Feed BBS after leaving parents
- Need pristine water (discus fry especially sensitive)
Cory / Pleco Fry:
- Bottom-dwellers, need sinking foods
- Feed crushed algae wafers, BBS
- Enjoy biofilm on driftwood/sponge filter
Tetra / Rasbora Fry:
- Tiny (need infusoria/green water first 5 days)
- Very sensitive to water quality
- Transition to BBS after week 1
Selling or Rehoming Fry
Once fry reach 2-3cm:
Options:
- Sell to local fish store (€0.50-2 per fish, bulk discounts)
- Sell online (aquarium forums, Facebook groups)
- Trade with other hobbyists
- Keep best for your own tanks
High-quality strains fetch better prices:
- Show-quality guppies: €5-15+
- Rare plecos: €10-50+
- Specialty angelfish: €5-20+
Conclusion
Raising fry successfully requires:
- Separate tank with gentle filtration
- Frequent, small feedings (4-6× daily first 2 weeks)
- Daily water changes (10-20%)
- Live foods (BBS = best growth)
- Patience (8-12 weeks to adult size)
Species-specific needs:
- Livebearers: Easy (born large, eat crushed flakes)
- Egg-layers: Challenging (tiny fry, need infusoria)
- Cichlids: Moderate (parents help, but need space)
Master fry-raising, and you can breed almost any fish!
Start with livebearers (guppies), then progress to egg-layers and cichlids.
Good luck — and prepare for LOTS of baby fish!
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