rb6k
Member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2012
- Messages
- 65
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 8
- Location
- Deeping St James
- Country
- United Kingdom
I woke up yesterday morning and my axolotl had laid eggs all over the tank, they're all stuck to indian almond leaves and stones so I was able to move them from the tank to a plastic container. I'm unsure what to do next really, some are black, some are white, some are half and half. I have left them in the container overnight.
I'm concerned that some of the eggs were laid on pellet food which means they've got chunks of food stuck to them that I've tried to remove without disturbing the egg, surely bacteria will grow on that and affect the babies? - Assuming they are fertilised? I am under the impression here that she wouldn't have likely laid her eggs unless my other axolotl had done his part first, right?
Its a day since I found them in the tank and they're not all that different - which images online seem to suggest is normal, they'll get bigger in the next day or so and in a few days start looking like tiny axolotl larvae, but is there a quicker way to know, and anything I should be doing now beyond just leaving them be?
I found an image of a furry fungus infected egg on the internet that someone else has said sums up a dead unfertilised egg, so do I just leave them all and then pluck out the 'dead' ones when it shows? Or do I need to be much more active in whipping out the dirty/furry ones. Not all have food on them, just any that were laid in the little corner where I'd dropped pellets in before I went to bed, I usually pellet the tank then clean out the remains the next day.
I'm concerned that some of the eggs were laid on pellet food which means they've got chunks of food stuck to them that I've tried to remove without disturbing the egg, surely bacteria will grow on that and affect the babies? - Assuming they are fertilised? I am under the impression here that she wouldn't have likely laid her eggs unless my other axolotl had done his part first, right?
Its a day since I found them in the tank and they're not all that different - which images online seem to suggest is normal, they'll get bigger in the next day or so and in a few days start looking like tiny axolotl larvae, but is there a quicker way to know, and anything I should be doing now beyond just leaving them be?
I found an image of a furry fungus infected egg on the internet that someone else has said sums up a dead unfertilised egg, so do I just leave them all and then pluck out the 'dead' ones when it shows? Or do I need to be much more active in whipping out the dirty/furry ones. Not all have food on them, just any that were laid in the little corner where I'd dropped pellets in before I went to bed, I usually pellet the tank then clean out the remains the next day.