That is awesome. I have never heard of anyone getting to that point and I am a total geek for this species. What did the eggs look like and where were they left? (if you could see me, you'd see me standing on my chair in excitement.) On Jan 7, 2010, at 9:09 PM, Susan Welenofsky wrote: > Oh, she's a female. The male followed her constantly and they laid eggs a few > times. But then I separated them as her tail had a bit of fin rot and never > put her back in with him. It might be wise to get at least one more female to > divert some of his attentions. Males, sigh... > > Susan _______________________________________________ GSAS-Member mailing list GSAS-Member@thekrib.com http://lists.thekrib.com/mailman/listinfo/gsas-member