I think I seen Narrowleaf Anacharis. That plant seems to be excellent when breeding as it provides excellent hiding spots for the babies. I never bred Cherry Barb but I did that with my White Cloud minnows.
Love this video! What fun. Secrete for success is having that fish free pond nearby full of daphnia and zooplankton, no fish diseases or parasites. I just bought ten long finned Cherry barbs. I'm hoping they stay alive and grow up strong. I always kept and still keep Rosy barbs, they have three or four surviving juveniles a year in their tank, these grow up and eventualy replace the adults. They live a long time for me at least five years so the small number of natural surving juveniles in a spawn is just right. They eat the rest, that's the way of things. I put in a new one in every year or so so they dont get too inbred. Thanks again excellent job. One question what is a Jelly kreisel lol!? I didnt know keeping jelly-fish was a thing!
Hi, thanks for the compliments. A Jelly kreisel is such a tank where the water flows in a circle in such a way that jellyfish don't hit the walls. Cheers, Eugene
@@riverp9019 How long jellies live depends strongly on the species and the way they are kept. The most kept species, moon jellies, can live more than a year. Polyps can live for 25 years. Aquarists try to develop good methods to make the jellies produce polyps. Sometimes they do that without problems, others refuse to make polyps and the whole colony dies due to lack of breeding.
A wonderful video. spectacular, a real pleasure to see you. My name is Alex, I have a Spanish-speaking aquarium channel and I would love to be able to put a piece of your video in a new project that I am going to do talking about reproductions, Of course your name would always be reflected in the video and also I would leave the link to your channel in the video description. I look forward to your response and it would be a real pleasure if you would give me your confirmation, anyway thank you very much for sharing this wonderful video
@@Zoo_Wild Of course, it will be a real pleasure. Thank you very much for your collaboration, it is an honor to subscribe to your channel, a huge greeting colleague
Wonderful video. It is terrific to see others interested in natural aquariums.
I think I seen Narrowleaf Anacharis. That plant seems to be excellent when breeding as it provides excellent hiding spots for the babies. I never bred Cherry Barb but I did that with my White Cloud minnows.
@Father Fish would love this! Great breeding setup, thank you!
Thank you!
I've never kept Cherry Barbs. Your video was very informative! thanks :)
Thank you! The technique (with a rain system and the rest) works for many other species too. Good luck, Eugene
Om ,waktu medianya pakai apa ,,aerator ?? Atau filter?? Atau tidak pakai apa-apa sama sekali ??
Great video. Thank you for sharing. Your video was very informative.
That was the plan. Thank you! Good luck, Eugène
Love this video! What fun. Secrete for success is having that fish free pond nearby full of daphnia and zooplankton, no fish diseases or parasites. I just bought ten long finned Cherry barbs. I'm hoping they stay alive and grow up strong. I always kept and still keep Rosy barbs, they have three or four surviving juveniles a year in their tank, these grow up and eventualy replace the adults. They live a long time for me at least five years so the small number of natural surving juveniles in a spawn is just right. They eat the rest, that's the way of things. I put in a new one in every year or so so they dont get too inbred. Thanks again excellent job. One question what is a Jelly kreisel lol!? I didnt know keeping jelly-fish was a thing!
Hi, thanks for the compliments. A Jelly kreisel is such a tank where the water flows in a circle in such a way that jellyfish don't hit the walls. Cheers, Eugene
@@Zoo_Wild Aaah I see, thank-you. How long do jelly fish live!? Do they produce
polyps before they die.....
@@riverp9019 How long jellies live depends strongly on the species and the way they are kept. The most kept species, moon jellies, can live more than a year. Polyps can live for 25 years. Aquarists try to develop good methods to make the jellies produce polyps. Sometimes they do that without problems, others refuse to make polyps and the whole colony dies due to lack of breeding.
A wonderful video. spectacular, a real pleasure to see you. My name is Alex, I have a Spanish-speaking aquarium channel and I would love to be able to put a piece of your video in a new project that I am going to do talking about reproductions, Of course your name would always be reflected in the video and also I would leave the link to your channel in the video description. I look forward to your response and it would be a real pleasure if you would give me your confirmation, anyway thank you very much for sharing this wonderful video
Hi Alex, you can do that, if my video is one of the thumbs at the end of your video, OK?
And thanks for the very kind words.
@@Zoo_Wild Of course, it will be a real pleasure. Thank you very much for your collaboration, it is an honor to subscribe to your channel, a huge greeting colleague
congratulations from Colombia, for your happy fishes
Thanks for the kind words. Cheers, Eugene
Thanks very much! Informative and entertaining.
Thank you, you're welcome. Cheers, Eugene
What plants have you put in the tank?
Most important is Ceratophyllum demersum. The one with 'normal leaves' is Hygrophila polysperma.
Love these fish
Such an amazing video+
Thank you so much, Eugene
Great job, congrats
Thank you! Cheers, Eugene
Hooray hooray,🤣
brrrrret thi spici!!!!!lol
:-). Cheers, Eugène
Really enjoyed this video
Thank you for the kind words. Cheers, Eugène