|

Discus
Discus have their own section in the shop, we
stock a wide variety. Text Below
Discus Video







This breeding pair were photographed
on 17 September 2003
Click on Discus images to enlarge

More has
been written about the Discus than any other tropical fish in the last 50
years, and it is now one of the most popular cichlids in the hobby, with
many books devoted to it. This is intended to be a very brief general
guide to its keeping and breeding within the aquarium. When wild caught
discus were first introduced into the hobby many years ago, they were a
rare site, and thought very hard to keep. With time, experienced hobbyists
mastered this aspect and the next step was breeding. Slowly people managed
to get eggs, but they would never get successful fry. The key was leaving
the fry with the parents, from whom they graze, eating their highly
nutritious slime coating. Now discus breeding is common place, any
thousands of colour strains have been produced, in addition to the many
wild colour forms. |

HABITAT
:
Discus are most commonly found in dense planting and wooded areas
in slow moving rivers and backwaters in the Amazon river system.
These waters are soft, warm and acidic, with little current. Their
natural flat shape and colour pattern is designed to give
camouflage in their natural home. They can usually be found in
large groups, and when not spawning are mostly a social cichlids.
Their natural food is comprised of aquatic inverts, insects, small
fish and fry and any other naturally occurring food that may be
available. Many other commonly kept south American tetras and
cichlids can be found in these waters. |

TEMPERAMENT, BEHAVIOUR AND SIZE:
In case you need reminding, Discus are Cichlids! In the real world this
means they are fishes of changeable behaviour, but also of character and
personality. They can on occasion be aggressive towards their own kind and
others, mainly when pair bonds are formed, or when territory of fry are
involved. If some consideration is paid to this, in cichlid terms they are
generally quite mild in behaviour. The main problem is with bullying
within themselves. Often, in small groups of fish the individual at the
bottom of the pecking order is on the receiving end of a great deal of
bullying, which can result in death. To avoid this, I would advocate not
keeping the fish in groups of less than 4, with 6+ being an optimum,
especially when young. This seems to spread the bullying out, and also
increase the confidence of the fish. Size wise, roughly 6-8" round is a
good side for an adult discus. |

AQUARIUM REQUIREMENTS: This is one of the areas that gives rise to the greatest amount of arguments between discus keepers, but this is what I feel is a good basic guide
-
Water
conditions for general keeping : pH 5.8-7.4 with 6.3-6.9 an optimum for
most varieties. Water hardness is just as important as pH, a kH of 1-6
and gH of 2-11 being generally suitable. The fish may live in harder
water, but for long term they need soft to medium water to thrive.
-
Temperature : a range of 80-84 is acceptable, although many fish keepers
use higher temperatures of up to 90f.
-
Water
quality : The higher the quality, the better! Tanks must be mature and
stable, with 0 ammonia / nitrite, and nitrates and DOC's as low as
possible, with 20ppm an upper limit. Trying to keep the water as free of
metals, phosphates and other contaminants will also help. Large weekly
water changes are probably the order of the day.
-
Filtration: Being big messy cichlids, efficient biological filtration is
needed, but filtration that doesn't produce too much current.
-
Tank size
: There are 2 main requirements, tank depth and volume. Because of their
size and swimming habits, a minimum of 18" is needed for tank depth,
with deeper being better. Volume wise, a rough guide is that each adult
discus will need 10 gallons of water. Larger tanks will also give more
stable water conditions, and taking into account other considerations
the minimum size for a discus display tank should be roughly 40 gallons.
-
Feeding :
A varied diet is the order of the day, this may include a high quality
dried food up to about 50-60% maximum, which the discus will take with
greed. Other foods should be insect fish based, such as frozen brine
shrimp, blood worm, mysis shrimp, black mosquito larvae, chopped earth
worm, prawns, chopped cockle etc. Discus can be susceptible to internal
parasitic infections, so take care with live foods, and due to the fats
/ proteins its perhaps best to feed animal meant sparingly if at all.
-
Tank
mates : tank mates should be none aggressive fish that are not too
active or skittish, and will tolerate warm soft acidic water. Dwarf
south American cichlids, sucker mouth catfish, cory's, tetra's,
rasbora's, pencil fish among others will provide good friends for
discus. Shoals of tetras or similar will act as dither fish, making the
discus feel more safe in their surroundings
-
Tank
Set-up : Discus certainly don't require bare tanks, and furnished
display aquarium may even be advantageous. Tall planting round the back
and sides of the tank, together with an inert substrate will limit the
skittish behaviour of the fish. Bog wood and perhaps a little inert rock
work will also be accepted, but the fish should be left large open
swimming areas in the tank centre
|

BREEDING:
Once many keepers have mastered keeping discus, their attentions often
turn to breeding. While not being impossible, it can be hard work, but is
also greatly rewarding. Like all cichlids, discus choose a spawning site
then guard and rear the eggs and resulting fry.
-
Sexing :
Discus can be very hard to sex other than when spawning, and no reliable
methods exist. A guide may be that males have longer fin extensions and
a wider fore head.
-
Pairing:
Discus don't take well to arranged marriages, so the best way to get a
breeding pair in general is to by a group of young unrelated fish of the
same colour type and let them pair up themselves. This may happen from
when the fish are half grown, but generally spawning doesn't start until
the fish are roughly ¾ of their adult size. Once a pair is formed it
will often remain for the life of the fish
-
Spawning
: Discus choose a near vertical smooth spawning site, which is cleaned
before 80-400 eggs are laid by the female, and fertilised by the male.
It takes 50-60 hours for the eggs to hatch, and another 36-48 hours for
them to become free swimming, at which point the fry will start to graze
of their parents. It may often take a few attempts for the pair to get
it right, but two females can lay eggs and appear to be a pair.
-
Breeding
Tank : Breeding tanks are best kept simple, with simple air powered
filtration, spawning sites (terracotta cones, broad leafed plants or
slate) and no substrate. Water should be very soft to allow the eggs to
develop properly, with excellent water quality and a temperature of
about 84-88f. The tank need not be as large as the display tanks, but
something of the order of 24x18x18 is certainly suitable.
-
Feeding
and conditioning : The parents will need a good and varied diet not just
to condition them to spawn, but to provide nutrition when they are
feeding their fry. Large water changes, a temperature rise and heavy
feeding is often a good spawning trigger.
-
Fry
rearing: The fry do best when given additional feedings of small foods
whilst with the parents, such as baby brine shrimp. After 3-6 weeks, the
parents will be exhausted, and the fry growing fast so it is best to
remove them. This is where lots of tanks and water changes are needed to
achieve a decent growth rate. I used to grow circa. 40 fry to just under
2" in a 55G tank, and this required heavy water changing. The discus
market is saturated with fish, so it best to grow 20-50 excellent fry
than 80 runts. Growth is reasonable, but not spectacular.
-
Source:
http://www.tropicalfishcentre.co.uk/chrisdiscus.htm
|



|
A Sick Discus is not a Happy Discus. This fish below was brought in near death
lying on its side on the bottom of the tank after suffering massive abuse from
being in a tank with the wrong occupants. The staff at the shop have been
conducting hour by hour care and he is now recovering and,
as you will see, feeding again from hand.
|
 

The image below was taken on 28 October 2004, over a week later, getting stronger and fitter.
Footnote: He went on to become part of a breeding pair - job done!

These beautiful fish have got to be one
of the all time favourites in terms of grace and beauty.
We regularly have stock of these and have
successfully bred these time after time again. We have some fry growing
up in the shop as I type this and its looking like the parents are
getting ready to spawn again.
 
 






aqua-fish.net |