Spawning Report: Limia peruginae
Name: John Satterlee
Scientific Name of Fish: Limia perugiae
Hobby Name of Fish: Perugia’s Limia
Method of Reproduction: Livebearer
Number and Gender Distribution of Parents: 2 male and 2 females
Origin of Parents: Tank raised, from Dan’s Fish
Limia perugiae is a pretty livebearer from Central America/Dominican Republic. The males have yellow fins with black edging.
Approximate number of fry: 18
Date of Hatch or Birth: Jan 7, 2023 (6 fry ) and Mar 6, 2023 (12 fry)
Date of Free Swimming If Hatched: N/A
Approx. Number of Fry at 60 Days: ____
Aquarium Conditions:
pH: 7.2
General Hardness: 150 ppm
Average Temperature (72-74 F)
Salinity: none
Average Nitrate: < 40 ppm
Aquarium Size: standard 20 gallon
Water Source: Rockville MD tap water with Seachem Prime
Water Changes: 80% once a month
Filtration System: sponge filter
Additives: ½ cup crushed coral
Décor:
Live Plants: Multiple species of Cryptocoryne, Valisneria to keep nitrates down
Small flower pots, sponge mops, large ish rocks to provide hiding spots and break lines of sight
Substrate: pebbles from Home Depot
Lighting Type and Timing: Home Depot light, 12 hrs on/12 hrs off
Food Fed to Parents and How Often: Tetra Color Tropical Flakes morning and evening. Freshly hatched baby brine shrimp every other day.
Food Fed to Fry and How Often: Finely ground dry fry food (Aquarium Coop) morning and evening, freshly hatched baby brine shrimp every other day.
Additional comments: The males really harassed the pregnant females a lot. Therefore I put in spawning mops and rocks to break up the lines of sight and allow the females to avoid the males to some extent. This improved but did not cure the problem. Finally I moved each pregnant female to her own 10 gallon tank so she could avoid the harassing males and bear her fry in peace.
The fry were raised using “Dean’s Fry System”. It is very convenient for feeding the fry and for keeping track of their growth. The fry are kept with the overhead lights off, so they only receive indirect lighting from nearby tanks. Also they have a little guppy grass for cover and to provide a structure for biofilm growth.
These are colony breeding nicely for me now although I would probably get more surviving fry if I had denser planting.