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#31
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
"Tom La Bron" wrote in message ... Lydia, It depends on what you call Mosquito fish. If you got them at a tropical fish store ( Snip) To display my total ignorance, what is a " Mosquito fish " ? Will it survive extremely Hot weather ? I have a 300 gal. 5' LX 3' WX 2' D. And since we live just East of Houston Texas the water gets hot enough to cook rice in ( okay maybe not ). I have several types of plants growing in it and more than a few Mosquito's. If there is a hardy fish I can put in and " Forget " that would be great. Thanks Richard |
#32
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
Do you have a mosquito control board/district? That's where local people
hear get them. They deliver free. ~ jan On Thu, 1 Jan 2004 09:16:33 -0600, "rem1061" wrote: To display my total ignorance, what is a " Mosquito fish " ? Will it survive extremely Hot weather ? I have a 300 gal. 5' LX 3' WX 2' D. And since we live just East of Houston Texas the water gets hot enough to cook rice in ( okay maybe not ). I have several types of plants growing in it and more than a few Mosquito's. If there is a hardy fish I can put in and " Forget " that would be great. Thanks Richard |
#33
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
Xref: kermit rec.ponds:137041
I think this is one that falls into 'your mileage may vary' and 'every pond is different'... I received 40 mosquito fish from the local vector control district near the end of October. They said they were collected from the wild. I quaranteened them for 2 weeks before introducting them to my 24"-30" deep 2500 gallon pond here in zone 10. The water temp hasn't been under 48F since then, and, I haven't seen one mosquito fish dead or alive since a couple weeks after adding them. Maybe the Koi ate them? I didn't think they were supposed to, especially as the mosquito fish are/were much faster than the Koi. Steve J. Noll | Ventura California | Glass Block Pond http://www.kissingfrogs.tv |
#34
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
Steve, to the best of my knowledge, once fish/fry get beyond the "swimming
eyes" stage, koi don't eat them. I've seen larger fish spit out babies that got between them and food when they were eating. Your 'skeeter fish are probably either hiding, or got sucked up by your filtration. Have you checked your filters? Lee "Steve J. Noll" wrote in message ... I think this is one that falls into 'your mileage may vary' and 'every pond is different'... I received 40 mosquito fish from the local vector control district near the end of October. They said they were collected from the wild. I quaranteened them for 2 weeks before introducting them to my 24"-30" deep 2500 gallon pond here in zone 10. The water temp hasn't been under 48F since then, and, I haven't seen one mosquito fish dead or alive since a couple weeks after adding them. Maybe the Koi ate them? I didn't think they were supposed to, especially as the mosquito fish are/were much faster than the Koi. Steve J. Noll | Ventura California | Glass Block Pond http://www.kissingfrogs.tv |
#35
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
"Just Me "Koi"" wrote in message ... You've got a point there! I was projecting my frustration with Mosquito fish on the original poster. To the original poster I apologize. To BV, please send me your mailing address so that I can ship a trillion Mosquito fish to you for belated Xmas present :-) lol I still can't imagine though that one will want mosquito fish for pond pet! Oh no apology needed. I didn't take anything personally - knew what you meant. I got the little buggers because we have wetlands behind our house which means a really big mosquito population so I knew there'd be food for them. Doubt it will cut down on the mosquitos, though, as I'm sure there are jillions of larvae layed in the swampy lake thing in the wetlands. And because of the wetlands area and our proximity to ocean and river we have lots of wildlife that I think would eat pet-type fish like koi. Herons, eagles, hawks, racoons, weasels - neighbor cat if some of the native wildlife doesn't eat him first like they did his housemate. So I thought this would be a critter I could keep in there that would have a natural food source and wouldn't get eaten by the local wildlife. Lydia |
#36
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
In my experience, I've seen my koi chase down mosquito fish, this was a
rare koi though. I've also seen koi inadvertently eat one that was eating on a koi stix. Stix & M.fish both sucked down. ~ jan On 2 Jan 2004 10:08:09 -0600, "Lee B." wrote: Steve, to the best of my knowledge, once fish/fry get beyond the "swimming eyes" stage, koi don't eat them. I've seen larger fish spit out babies that got between them and food when they were eating. Your 'skeeter fish are probably either hiding, or got sucked up by your filtration. Have you checked your filters? Lee "Steve J. Noll" wrote in message . .. I think this is one that falls into 'your mileage may vary' and 'every pond is different'... I received 40 mosquito fish from the local vector control district near the end of October. They said they were collected from the wild. I quaranteened them for 2 weeks before introducting them to my 24"-30" deep 2500 gallon pond here in zone 10. The water temp hasn't been under 48F since then, and, I haven't seen one mosquito fish dead or alive since a couple weeks after adding them. Maybe the Koi ate them? I didn't think they were supposed to, especially as the mosquito fish are/were much faster than the Koi. Steve J. Noll | Ventura California | Glass Block Pond http://www.kissingfrogs.tv |
#37
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
Oh no apology needed. I didn't take anything personally - knew what you meant. I got the little buggers because we have wetlands behind our house which means a really big mosquito population so I knew there'd be food for them. Doubt it will cut down on the mosquitos, though, as I'm sure there are jillions of larvae layed in the swampy lake thing in the wetlands. And because of the wetlands area and our proximity to ocean and river we have lots of wildlife that I think would eat pet-type fish like koi. Herons, eagles, hawks, racoons, weasels - neighbor cat if some of the native wildlife doesn't eat him first like they did his housemate. So I thought this would be a critter I could keep in there that would have a natural food source and wouldn't get eaten by the local wildlife. Lydia Oh Lydia, please tell me your gambusia are not in a natural pond! All kidding aside it's really too bad so many people really belive that gambusia are great at eating mosquitos. They are not, i live where gambusias are native and they don't do anything to control the mosquitos. they do eat other fishes eggs and fry (as well as their own) No critcizim of you intended but everyone should know what a threat to the ecosystem gambusia can be out side their natural range. For mosquito control other small fish native to the area should be used. Actually around here the best control for mosquitos has been found to be Enneacanthus sunfish but they can only be used if they are native to your area. Now that i have thoroughly made you mad rest assured the problem is not with you but with state wildlife officials that seem to think that exotic release is crime unless they do it. Gambusia have been released far outside their range with the mistaken idea they eat more mosquito larvae than other fish. athough other fish will eat gambusia they often stay in areas of the habitat that other fish cannot exploit and so avoid predation while eating the fry of other fish that do exploit the shallow water habitat. if this was a pond with no outlet or inlet which isn't connected it any way to the outside environment... nevermind ;-) The anti gambusia sociaty |
#38
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
BTW, the little buggers can live anywhere they can stay damp and not freeze
solid! The anti gambusia sociaty |
#39
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
They will still be there Lydia. getting reid of them with be the trick!
Moon remove nospam from e-mail to send to me, I grow trees in aquariums like bonsai. I breed dwarf crayfish, great for planted community tanks. If you can get me a shovelnose sturgeon fingerling (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) no wild caught please, contact me |
#40
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
To display my total ignorance, what is a " Mosquito fish " ? Will it survive
extremely Hot weather ? I have a 300 gal. 5' LX 3' WX 2' D. And since we live just East of Houston Texas the water gets hot enough to cook rice in ( okay maybe not ). I have several types of plants growing in it and more than a few Mosquito's. If there is a hardy fish I can put in and " Forget " that would be great. Thanks Richard Mosquito fish are usually Gambusia affinis, they live here in NC in water that is almost hot to the touch. Just make sure thyere si no way for them to escape into the natural environment. they can reall cause probelms. Moon remove nospam from e-mail to send to me, I grow trees in aquariums like bonsai. I breed dwarf crayfish, great for planted community tanks. If you can get me a shovelnose sturgeon fingerling (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) no wild caught please, contact me |
#41
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
Seattle, I would love to live in Seattle. then I could maybe see Heart nore
than once every twenty years. Ann Wilson is the greatest! Moon |
#42
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will mosquito fish survive the winter?
No, no. This is just a 5'x6'x2' hole in our backyard - not a natural pond.
I did hear from the good people of this ng when I first got them to be sure that there is no way they would be introduced into any natural waterways from my pond and I feel very confident we did. Thanks for the concern! Lydia [who isn't mad... angry-mad that is... crazy-mad is questionable] "Moontanman" wrote in message ... Oh Lydia, please tell me your gambusia are not in a natural pond! All kidding aside it's really too bad so many people really belive that gambusia are great at eating mosquitos. They are not, i live where gambusias are native and they don't do anything to control the mosquitos. they do eat other fishes eggs and fry (as well as their own) No critcizim of you intended but everyone should know what a threat to the ecosystem gambusia can be out side their natural range. For mosquito control other small fish native to the area should be used. Actually around here the best control for mosquitos has been found to be Enneacanthus sunfish but they can only be used if they are native to your area. Now that i have thoroughly made you mad rest assured the problem is not with you but with state wildlife officials that seem to think that exotic release is crime unless they do it. Gambusia have been released far outside their range with the mistaken idea they eat more mosquito larvae than other fish. athough other fish will eat gambusia they often stay in areas of the habitat that other fish cannot exploit and so avoid predation while eating the fry of other fish that do exploit the shallow water habitat. if this was a pond with no outlet or inlet which isn't connected it any way to the outside environment... nevermind ;-) The anti gambusia sociaty |
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