weather loach in a pond
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weather loach in a pond
Hello all this is my first post im looking for some info on weather loaches as in are they ok to keep in a garden pond with the other fish and comeback indoors in the colder months with the others... ?
Thanx for any help
Thanx for any help
Re: weather loach in a pond
Hi, where are you based? Asian Misgurnus and Paramisgurnus spp. are now considered invasive species across much of Europe due to them escaping from fish farms and private garden ponds then becoming established in natural waters. In Spain they're also exerting a negative effect on endemic Cobitis populations. If there's any chance of them surviving the whole year round outdoors in your country, I'd strongly advise against it.
Re: weather loach in a pond
Hi i live in north east englandMatt wrote:Hi, where are you based? Asian Misgurnus and Paramisgurnus spp. are now considered invasive species across much of Europe due to them escaping from fish farms and private garden ponds then becoming established in natural waters. In Spain they're also exerting a negative effect on endemic Cobitis populations. If there's any chance of them surviving the whole year round outdoors in your country, I'd strongly advise against it.
Re: weather loach in a pond
come on guys someone must know if a weather loach is ok in a pond in uk and im pritty sure it wont get into the water system the closest river is about 5 mile away and very salty
Re: weather loach in a pond
If there's no risk of escape then you should be ok.
Re: weather loach in a pond
http://www.loaches.com/species-index/we ... licaudatus
See the lowest temperature?
If your pond will stay at least that warm, then the weather loach may be fine outdoors year round. Otherwise, better to bring them in for the winter.
See the lowest temperature?
If your pond will stay at least that warm, then the weather loach may be fine outdoors year round. Otherwise, better to bring them in for the winter.
38 tanks, 2 ponds over 4000 liters of water to keep clean and fresh.
Happy fish keeping!
Happy fish keeping!
Re: weather loach in a pond
They can go colder than that as they're breeding here in northern Spain.
Re: weather loach in a pond
I think perhaps you should consider how fish arrive in an otherwise empty pond. I suspect they arrive on the beaks of birds. I'm not convinced that the geographical seperation is a good control.
Re: weather loach in a pond
How deep is the pond? Weather Loaches (Dojos) are notorious for jumping out of any uncovered aquahome, if it's shallow enough, and even if it's deep. Because of how they're designed, they come to the surface to gulp air, and they also get excited and frenzied when the barometric pressure changes, signaling a change in weather. That's when they're most likely to jump out of their watery environment.
They are coldwater fish, and if yours has been bred and raised in aquariums all its life, it would be best to continue letting it live in a covered tank.
Besides, aren't they cute enough to want to spoil? That's best done in an aquarium where you can watch their cute antics and give them treats (not too often though -- not good to overfeed).
In an open pond, they would also be vulnerable to predation. Water birds, cats, water snakes -- all could make a meal of them. If you want yours as a pet, it needs the protection of an in-home aquarium with carefully selected, peaceful mates.
On the subject of mates, Dojos are a social fish and fare better with more than one. A group of no fewer than three of them is preferred.
I ran this past my little dojos, and they vetoed the pond idea, fins down!
-- Dojosmama
They are coldwater fish, and if yours has been bred and raised in aquariums all its life, it would be best to continue letting it live in a covered tank.
Besides, aren't they cute enough to want to spoil? That's best done in an aquarium where you can watch their cute antics and give them treats (not too often though -- not good to overfeed).
In an open pond, they would also be vulnerable to predation. Water birds, cats, water snakes -- all could make a meal of them. If you want yours as a pet, it needs the protection of an in-home aquarium with carefully selected, peaceful mates.
On the subject of mates, Dojos are a social fish and fare better with more than one. A group of no fewer than three of them is preferred.
I ran this past my little dojos, and they vetoed the pond idea, fins down!
-- Dojosmama
Re: weather loach in a pond
Hey,
I keep dojos in my water garden (~200 gallons or so, maybe 2 ft deep). They've been in there for years, and get through the winter
(I'm in east TN) just fine.
Batch
I keep dojos in my water garden (~200 gallons or so, maybe 2 ft deep). They've been in there for years, and get through the winter
(I'm in east TN) just fine.
Batch
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