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Annuals denotes fish who inhabit temporary
bodies of water that are prone to completely dry
up during the dry season. The Annual Killies
have evolved a method to keep their species
alive through the dry season by laying eggs in
the soil that delay their hatching until the
water returns with the wet season. The
incubation period for these eggs can be as long
as 2 years but usually it is somewhere between 2
and 6 months. The live style of these fish are
naturally short and furious, they have to hatch
with the rains, grow to maturity and lay plenty
of eggs before the dry season returns. So their
growth rate is extremely fast and most will
reach maturity within 2 or 3 months, some as
little as 5 weeks.
The Non-Annuals are egg hangers, that is they
lay their eggs among plants and roots and have
an incubation period of between 10 days and 1
month, averaging about 14 days. Most Non-Annuals
also have the ability to lay eggs that will
survive a short dry period just like the
Annuals. Non-Annuals have a longer and less
hurried lifestyle, their maturity might take as
long as 6 months.
Most Killies will do fine at room temperature,
around 70 degrees (F), they will be happy in as
little as 1 gallon per pair and have no need for
extra lighting or fancy filters. They do prefer
live or frozen foods and their reproduction is a
much more labor intensive chore for the
hobbyist. They do require clean water and they
will do much better with a teaspoon of salt per
gallon added to their water to prevent diseases.
They are somewhat rare in petshops because the
large fish farms are not able to mass produce
Killifish like they can with most other aquarium
fish. Killies spawn daily but lay only a few
eggs, unlike other fish who lay all their eggs
at one time.
Spawning methods for the different types of
Killies to be discussed in the future:
Annuals or Soil Spawning Killifish
Non Annuals Or Plant Spawning Killifish
And Switch Spawning Killifish, which are able to
utilize either of the above methods.
Killies are some of the most beautiful
freshwater fish in the world. And well worth the
extra effort it takes to reproduce them in
captivity.
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