With really good pairs breeding discus is easy, but there are way more so so pairs and young pairs than there are really good ones. They may simply need a little more time to figure it out or you might even have two males.
I thought I had a breeding pair, on Saturday at noon, things were going good, both male and female were cleaning the breeding cone intensely and doing their shaking routine. The process was going on for hours up until the night, the breeding tank is in the garage and it gets pitch dark at night, so I turn on a nightlight, like I usually do. Hoping to see them lay eggs before I go to bed I watched and observed for a few minutes, all of a sudden the cleaning turned into fighting?!?! Like tails getting shredded and scales falling fighting, so I let them be and went to bed. Couple of days later after doing a WC, the female still faces the cone doing minor cleaning pecks and shaking not as intense as Saturday, the male looks like he has no interest. WHAT DID I DO WRONG?!? I can't get to the laying egg stage. Didn't know breeding Discus was this difficult!!
With really good pairs breeding discus is easy, but there are way more so so pairs and young pairs than there are really good ones. They may simply need a little more time to figure it out or you might even have two males.
I'm hoping time is key, its only been less than a week when putting them together.
I'm sure that I have a M/F, the breeding tube dropped, one Discus has a curved pointy tube, the other is straight almost rectangular tube <-- if thats not the case then I've been reading LIES!! lol
Larry Bugg
NADA - Vice President
Atlanta Area Aquarium Association
I believe a little light is good for all discus. Complete darkness means they can't see prey and will be nervous.
Larry Bugg
NADA - Vice President
Atlanta Area Aquarium Association