olmxalotl
New member
- Joined
- May 13, 2010
- Messages
- 11
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Country
- New Zealand
Okay,
back with another report on my noob axololtl farm.
feeding them is hard. cleaning the water out constantly of dead brine shrimp is hard. but i've still got 100+ axolotl larvae and the project carries on.
what i wanted to talk about was something i've noticed,
i'm gonna call it bubble belly and or grumpy gut. sometimes the larvae die, i've heard many explanations, from bad genes to too much food, to too little food, or dirty water etc. among the dead, i am seeing one of two phenomena. 1st, even though there's food, these guys aren't eating it. the others are large and healthy, but some are skinny and sick. 2nd there are those who appeared healthy and then suddenly died or got sick, usually accompanied by the appearance of a bubble in the belly (floating upside down) amongst the other food in them.
bubble belly tends to get the larger healthier looking ones, the skinny ones tend to convulse and die eventually or eat and act as if it never happened, as for the bubble belly big guys, well i'm not sure exactly what is causing it. i've got them in 11 different containers. certain ones don't develop any malady (like the big one, even though the cat knocked it over and i had to pick them up off the carpet), while others just seem to fail.
i had said earlier that one of my twins died and the other is well.
i think though, the culprit may be brine shrimp eggs. they clog their stomachs and then the food rots in their bellies and they die maybe?
i'm feeding a lot of axolotls. because there are so many, i have lost a bit of my emotionalism about it (some not all). but i do want to do the best job i can raising them.
after noticing the brine shrimp eggs in many of the dead and dying ones, i think i'd better clean up my feeding habits.
i'm going to separate them into more smaller containers again soon, but it's easier to clean and change the water of the few large ones i have going.
anyway, is that right? would brine shrimp eggs kill larval axolotls? what else might be causing bubble belly?
are all of them, even though displaying different symptoms, dying from my mismanagement? the underdeveloped thin ones; brine shrimp eggs clogged them and they starved to death. the well developed healthy looking bubble belly ones; brine shrimp eggs clogged them and the exploded on their own rotting guts.
i was told (here) that the water has to be swimming with brine shrimp. i monitor their bellies and try to keep them all well fed and the water clean.
the other's don't seem to develop bubble belly/grumpy gut. but it would be good to know!
they're a bit too small to dissect, but that's what i can see so far!
other than that, it's going alright. with a bunch of leucistic (sp?), melanoid, albino, possibly golden albinos thrown in the mix. although i would wager the majority are wildtype, how soon can you tell? overall, even with the deaths, i think it will be alright. 100+ is far too many to raise unless you want to make a part time job of it. and unless i'm doing something really bad, i should still end up with 100+ juveniles in a couple more months!
:happy:
i can't wait till i get past this stupid brine shrimp phase. it's really time consuming and messy!
olmxalotl
back with another report on my noob axololtl farm.
feeding them is hard. cleaning the water out constantly of dead brine shrimp is hard. but i've still got 100+ axolotl larvae and the project carries on.
what i wanted to talk about was something i've noticed,
i'm gonna call it bubble belly and or grumpy gut. sometimes the larvae die, i've heard many explanations, from bad genes to too much food, to too little food, or dirty water etc. among the dead, i am seeing one of two phenomena. 1st, even though there's food, these guys aren't eating it. the others are large and healthy, but some are skinny and sick. 2nd there are those who appeared healthy and then suddenly died or got sick, usually accompanied by the appearance of a bubble in the belly (floating upside down) amongst the other food in them.
bubble belly tends to get the larger healthier looking ones, the skinny ones tend to convulse and die eventually or eat and act as if it never happened, as for the bubble belly big guys, well i'm not sure exactly what is causing it. i've got them in 11 different containers. certain ones don't develop any malady (like the big one, even though the cat knocked it over and i had to pick them up off the carpet), while others just seem to fail.
i had said earlier that one of my twins died and the other is well.
i think though, the culprit may be brine shrimp eggs. they clog their stomachs and then the food rots in their bellies and they die maybe?
i'm feeding a lot of axolotls. because there are so many, i have lost a bit of my emotionalism about it (some not all). but i do want to do the best job i can raising them.
after noticing the brine shrimp eggs in many of the dead and dying ones, i think i'd better clean up my feeding habits.
i'm going to separate them into more smaller containers again soon, but it's easier to clean and change the water of the few large ones i have going.
anyway, is that right? would brine shrimp eggs kill larval axolotls? what else might be causing bubble belly?
are all of them, even though displaying different symptoms, dying from my mismanagement? the underdeveloped thin ones; brine shrimp eggs clogged them and they starved to death. the well developed healthy looking bubble belly ones; brine shrimp eggs clogged them and the exploded on their own rotting guts.
i was told (here) that the water has to be swimming with brine shrimp. i monitor their bellies and try to keep them all well fed and the water clean.
the other's don't seem to develop bubble belly/grumpy gut. but it would be good to know!
they're a bit too small to dissect, but that's what i can see so far!
other than that, it's going alright. with a bunch of leucistic (sp?), melanoid, albino, possibly golden albinos thrown in the mix. although i would wager the majority are wildtype, how soon can you tell? overall, even with the deaths, i think it will be alright. 100+ is far too many to raise unless you want to make a part time job of it. and unless i'm doing something really bad, i should still end up with 100+ juveniles in a couple more months!
:happy:
i can't wait till i get past this stupid brine shrimp phase. it's really time consuming and messy!
olmxalotl
Last edited: