Sunday, 15 January 2012

PART 10: THE TEAM GROWS BIGGER!

Just a day after the platy-babies came to this world, a question flashed in my mind. What about the other pregnant female platy? I was pretty sure that it was almost on the verge of giving birth to its babies. But, I was not sure about the date and the time. And, I did not want to take any risk. I thought, however, it was too much of work to compose a separate container again for this to-be platy-mom and its babies. For the sake of optimization and efficiency, I wanted to compose an arrangement inside the fishbowl itself. It offered a couple of advantages. I had less work to do; I did not have to stress the to-be mom by transferring it from the fishbowl. Since I was not sure after how many days exactly the babies are going to arrive, I did not want to confine the to-be mom to a smaller container. That would stress the fish and was not good for the unborn babies either. With the baby-safe arrangement done inside the fishbowl, I did not have to worry anymore about how many more days the to-be mom was going to take to deliver the babies. The baby-safe composition was in place to provide safety to the babies whenever they arrived. This method has one disadvantage. In this arrangement, separating the babies from the mom and other adults was going to be a bigger and more complex task. I thought, let that be the case. The advantages were big enough to make that disadvantage look so small. And, I thought, working for results was not better than working for results after actually obtaining the results! So, I wanted to put in hard work after seeing the babies.

Over that afternoon, when I came home for my lunch, I just rushed to the fishbowl and noticed that the swollen belly of the pregnant Wagtail platy had gone flat. It was the time to look for the babies. I took a closer look and could spot a few little creatures hidden in the bushy artificial plants. I wanted to forego my lunch and get into business. I brought a bucket of water. I transferred all the 10 adult fishes from the fishbowl to the bucket. I did not disturb the baby-safe arrangement anyway and took about 70% of the water out. I ensured that I did not take out any platy-baby with water. After decreasing the water-level considerably in the fishbowl, I started dismantling the baby-safe infrastructure. Once I was done, I had only a little water and the new-born platy babies in the fishbowl. It was time to transfer the babies to the container that already housed 20+ 1-day-old babies. I transferred the new-born babies along with that little water to a plastic container. Then, with the help of a tea-cup I transferred them into the platy-baby container (Nursery). I wanted to do the transfer in two stages to avoid passing the mess and dirt from the fishbowl to the nursery. I got a chance to count the babies while I did the transfer in batches. There were about 30+ babies from this mom! So, I got 50+ platy-babies in my nursery. Then, I restored the fishbowl and transferred back the 10 adults into it.

That nursery was a bare-bottom 4-Litre glass jar. I liked that better without any gravel and decoration. I was in a position to clearly see how each of the babies did. The new batch of babies did not take much time to get trained with their food. I kept the babies on finely crushed dry fish-food for about a couple of weeks. Then after some reading, research and experimentation, I formulated a new kind of fish food for the babies. I shall discuss about my fish-food formulation and experimentation in another section. I was so happy and contended to get 50+ platy babies. I knew that not all of them were going to survive. That was natural. Not all fish-babies do survive in the nature (wild). On a closer examination, I realized that some of the babies had deformities. And, those were the ones that were probably not going to stay long. To give the babies their best chance of survival, I changed up to 50% of the water and fed them thrice every day. With the nursery in place, I had to maintain three homes that housed my fishes - The goldfish bowl, the platy bowl and the nursery! That was a little too much work to do on a regular basis. But, my keen interest in my hobby could keep me away from getting tired of the chore. After all my adult platies died, I was careful not to use untreated tap-water, strait from the tap, in my goldfish bowl and baby-fish nursery. I followed a simple method. I brought a new 16-Litre bucket and stored tap-water in that for a span of 48 hours before using that in my goldfish bowl. However, I did not use that water directly in the nursery. 

I disinfected, thoroughly cleaned and restored the fishbowl that had accommodated the adult platies. I used this fishbowl as a little water-processing and stabilizing unit. This is how it worked. To initialize the unit, I filled that with water that had stayed for more than 48 hours in the bucket. Then, I added a little bit of relatively clean water from the nursery to the water in the stabilizing unit. After keeping the water in that unit for more than 24 hours, I added once again a little bit of relatively clean water from the nursery to the water in the stabilizing unit. Then, I took the required volume of water from the unit to use in my nursery. And, then, took the same volume of water (kept for more than 48 hours) from the bucket and added that to the water in the stabilizing unit. I continued this cycle to reduce the variance in water quality. Life went on fine for me and the platy-babies. But, there were couple of interesting events awaiting us NEXT!

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PART 10: THE TEAM GROWS BIGGER! by Debi Prasad Mahapatra is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

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