wild Discus breeding in nature - Symphysodon aequifasciata fry - Amazon diving rainy season !

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  • čas přidán 1. 08. 2024
  • Discus breeding in nature: footage of wild discus cichlids ( Symphysodon aequifasciata ) with fry in their natural habitat. See wild discus habitats in the Amazon lowland and learn about the changes in the habitat and rise and fall of the water levels. Come see what diving in the Amazon wild discus biotope in the rainy season is like! Filmed in 1999 in Brazil, near the heart of the blue discus habitat at the confluence of the Rio Tapajos, Rio Solimoes ( Amazonas ) and Rio Trombetas. Filmed above and below water in nature!
    Deutsche Version: Coming soon!
    Japanese Version: • ディスカス アマゾン川 生息地 で 子育て ...
    Video index
    00:00 Introduction wild discus in nature
    00:25 the wild discus habitat in the Amazon lowland - wild discus biotope
    00:44 seasonal change in the wild discus habitat
    01:24 wild discus ( Symphysodon aequifasciata ) below water
    03:21 discus habitat in the dry season
    04:00 wild discus in the rainy season, onset of the rains!
    04:50 diving with discus and severums ( Heros efasciatus )in the rainy season
    06:00 discus with their young in nature !
    07:07 wild discus pair with babies
    09:00 discus breeding everywhere!
    11:27 just caught wild discus
    11:38 wild discus export facility
    My 1000 gallon Xingu tank: • 1000 GALLON XINGU TANK...
    Gold nugget plecos in the wild: • GOLD NUGGET PLECO , Ba...
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    PIRANHAS guide - • PIRANHA Guide I: PYGOC... ( Pygocentrus cariba and others )
    CARDINALS in nature - • CARDINAL in NATURE / N... ( Paracheirodon axelrodi )
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    CORYDORAS in nature - • CORYDORAS in NATURE ( ... ( Corydoras apiaka habitat destruction )
    STINGRAYS collecting in nature - • Catching STINGRAYS - P... ( Potamotrygon motoro )
    BLUE RAMS in nature - • BLUE RAM - RAMIREZI CI... ( Mikrogeophagus ramirezi )

Komentáře • 103

  • @gillyg.naughtyg.1339
    @gillyg.naughtyg.1339 Před 2 lety +13

    As a wild discus keeper this documentary is super educational and beautifully captured. Thanks and keep up the good work !!

  • @tropicalfishhub
    @tropicalfishhub Před 2 lety +6

    Amazing footage! Thanks a lot for sharing! It is very interesting that discus live in high currents. I noticed that my wilds actually enjoy flow and tend to be more relaxed in tanks with current rather than in static water, where they become more nervous easily.

  • @plecocicho
    @plecocicho Před 2 lety +2

    BBC quality there. And first in situ breeding video of wild discus in the world.

  • @christophernoto
    @christophernoto Před rokem +6

    Thank you. This is wonderful work, Oliver, at every level. Fine video, and excellent narrative detail. I am so grateful to see these fish breeding, in their natural habitat, a thing I never expected to see.

  • @Dracobear13
    @Dracobear13 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this insight Oliver.

  • @user-hl7zs2uc9f
    @user-hl7zs2uc9f Před 3 měsíci

    Incredible

  • @greenthumbaquariums1185
    @greenthumbaquariums1185 Před 2 lety +1

    This was great! Thanks for putting it together.

  • @JuanMiguelArtigasAzas
    @JuanMiguelArtigasAzas Před 2 lety +2

    What a fantastic video! Thank you for sharing this wonderful experience and all the great information included

  • @psystealth
    @psystealth Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastic thank you Oliver.

  • @ridgeback316
    @ridgeback316 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank's for this Video!👍😎

  • @andrewsager7928
    @andrewsager7928 Před 2 lety +2

    Great Video. Very informative!! Always like to see fish in their natural habitats doing what comes naturally. 👍

  • @Mikolji
    @Mikolji Před 2 lety +4

    So cool! Love the underwater footage. Thanks for sharing all this incredible info,

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +1

      thanks ! better than having tapes sitting in the basement for 20 years!

  • @andycarter4581
    @andycarter4581 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing thank you

  • @johanpersson597
    @johanpersson597 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks :)

  • @Seven7ails
    @Seven7ails Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @Apistogramma
    @Apistogramma Před 2 lety +1

    Great Video. Thanks for your sharing.

  • @callenclarke371
    @callenclarke371 Před 2 lety

    FANTASTIC FOOTAGE! WELL DONE!

  • @COOPERSCICHILDS
    @COOPERSCICHILDS Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome

  • @hapaluku
    @hapaluku Před 2 lety +1

    Great video from natur. Thanks for sharing :)

  • @kjeaquatics
    @kjeaquatics Před 2 lety

    Always great stuff

  • @compedious591
    @compedious591 Před rokem

    Great video thank you ❤

  • @4ametist4
    @4ametist4 Před 2 lety +2

    Recently I started keeping discus and I love this kind of content. Seeing how they do in their natural habitat is very intriguing. Very nice and educational documentary!!

  • @yorkyone2143
    @yorkyone2143 Před rokem +2

    Excellent video, having kept a Discus in my aquarium for many years its fascinating to see how they live in the wild using leaves to place their eggs on, not the spawning cones by breeders. Mine was a Red Turquoise Discus, captive bred but a real pet very bold, curious & pleased to see me even when I didn't have food for him.

  • @davidnanasi1384
    @davidnanasi1384 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent very informative....insightful....well done! ♥

  • @priscillaa.1156
    @priscillaa.1156 Před rokem +1

    Wow! What a neat video! ^_^ Thank you for letting us tag a long and see all of this! It's fascinating!

  • @melissaskinner4501
    @melissaskinner4501 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Wow that was awesome

  • @WinniesDiscus
    @WinniesDiscus Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing this video, Oliver. It's a great one!

  • @SantaMonicaFiltration
    @SantaMonicaFiltration Před 2 lety +3

    They feel protected in the dark water

  • @allahuakbarquran742
    @allahuakbarquran742 Před 2 lety +1

    So nice to see wild stripped discus...in pet shops you see unless white,red,blue diamond discus

  • @niladrisarkhel7172
    @niladrisarkhel7172 Před rokem

    Very educational....thanks ❤

  • @svenw-u3f
    @svenw-u3f Před 2 lety +1

    Nice work!

  • @AJAquatics-iv9mz
    @AJAquatics-iv9mz Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing great work

  • @brianbyers5400
    @brianbyers5400 Před 2 lety +1

    I love wild discus

  • @Constantine_Cvl8
    @Constantine_Cvl8 Před 9 měsíci

    I always love returning to this video, it goes to show how discus, despite how they look and act, are still cichlids, and cichlids are probably one of the toughest and most dependable family of fish available in the freshwater aquarium hobby!
    It's videos like these that help dissipate myths that constanly haunt and perperuate in this hobby.

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yes, i have pictures of angelfish in both books also, in nature all fish are a little tougher!

  • @alberthuang798
    @alberthuang798 Před 2 lety +2

    fascinating, thanks for sharing !

  • @m4l4ch1
    @m4l4ch1 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent informations and outstanding pictures. Thank you very much.

  • @vitaliyvyntu4566
    @vitaliyvyntu4566 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting

  • @jojyp
    @jojyp Před rokem

    Very informative video!! Thanks for sharing the valuable information!!!

  • @HenrikLantzHedstrom
    @HenrikLantzHedstrom Před rokem

    Amazing content! Thank you! 🤩

  • @lkptec175
    @lkptec175 Před rokem

    Thanks for your work.

  • @anask7668
    @anask7668 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video!

  • @klausoxen6597
    @klausoxen6597 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Oliver, thank's for this Upload 👍 Very interesting!
    Greets from the Center of Germany 😊

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +1

      I will try to make a German version also, when there is some time!

  • @donp11
    @donp11 Před 2 lety

    amazing

  • @opercula
    @opercula Před rokem +4

    Simply unforgetable footage !!! Thank you for your dedicated work !!!

  • @zekethefishgeek8690
    @zekethefishgeek8690 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow thank you so very much sir... seeing the beautiful black yellow, and cream colored fry of the Black Arowana on video, in natural habits is a dream of mine...
    Any footage of them in the archives, sir?

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +1

      this region has only silver arowana, there is one jumping in the photo shown in the video. I have not seen black arowana in nature, but I have not spent a lot of time in the regions where they would occur.

  • @portalmasterry6765
    @portalmasterry6765 Před 2 lety +2

    I thought discus needs super clean water and here is a nature vidoe showing them in murky muddy water.

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +7

      cloudy does not mean unclean, there is a huge amount of exchange there, despite all the organic bits floating around. if you were to measure NO2 or NO3 it would be near zero anyhow. Imagine the water coming through your river (if you are north) after the snow melt, it is carrying silt from the mountains, and leaf litter from the previous autumn etc.

  • @onlyfinsau
    @onlyfinsau Před 2 lety +3

    Great video.I have a few questions. What do these discus eat in the wild and how easy it is for them to find food?

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +8

      that is a very complex question. So for one, it is easy for them to find food, because discus occur often in very large numbers, and their stomachs are always full, even in the dry season. I am certain they eat some aquatic micro-invertebrates, such as worms and the small shrimp you see in the water column. But: stomach analysis done on discus also suggests that there is a lot of proteins from the bacterial mass the fish ingest. In nature, the substrate is a fine clustered mess of bacteria, algae, fungi and fine debris. The stuff that makes rocks slippery when you try to walk in a river. So fish that forage along the bottom either purposefully or inadvertently pick up and digest this mass. There are several scientific publications on it, try searching for them online.

    • @onlyfinsau
      @onlyfinsau Před 2 lety +2

      @@belowwater Thank you so much

  • @danielw.6428
    @danielw.6428 Před 2 lety

    Hi, thanks for the nice video. Can you say something about the actual water temperatures while breeding? Thanks :)

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety

      we measured 31C that day, which is more or less the same as in dry season, less than 200km off the equator temperature is pretty steady!

  • @aaronfiddy4260
    @aaronfiddy4260 Před rokem

    Do a gulper catfish video pls

  • @froffygaming
    @froffygaming Před 2 lety

    Hi, can I ask , in the normal season there is alot of water flow? And then to breed they find less water flow? So they normally live in fast moving water, then take advantage in the flood season of slow moving water to breed?
    So when in a aquarium we are told , slow water always no matter what, but it could be fast flowing unless breeding?
    And another question, if they can breed at a depth without natural sunlight, one would think that having a light on 24/7 when we breed them in aquarium is not needed?

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +3

      the discus habitats in the Amazon lowland region all have a lot of current,, the discus are at the edge of terra firme, where water drains down. In the dry season you have to hold onto something to see discus, so the current is quite strong. The trigger is not "taking advantage of slow moving water" but more the new available habitat, increase in food and the flood pulse of the rainy season itself.
      Now, don't forget that most aquarium raised discus are as far removed from wild discus as fancy guppies are from wild guppies. Their behaviour included, so I don't think what we know about wild discus is relevant to the pigeon blood etc that are raised in sterile aquariums for 20+ generations.

    • @froffygaming
      @froffygaming Před 2 lety

      @@belowwater that's great info thanks , I'll look more into it as it interests me

  • @Khabib9-z8w
    @Khabib9-z8w Před 10 měsíci

    There are alot of misinformation about discus like discus needs to be in extra clean and clear water,whereas their original natural habitat doesn’t prove so,that’s why i just bought blackwater for my discus really makes them stress free and enhance the color of the discus which i just bought in aquarium,

    • @GreenCanvasInteriorscape
      @GreenCanvasInteriorscape Před 7 měsíci

      Do you mean that you purchased blackwater or went in for the concept of doing a natural tannin infused Brown water naturalistic tank?
      Had never heard of blackwater for sale but I've seen betta and premixed saltwater for sale at the local petco's and thought why not

    • @Khabib9-z8w
      @Khabib9-z8w Před 7 měsíci

      @@GreenCanvasInteriorscape the water is called Black Water for aquarium then it make your water like tanin like their natural habitat

  • @rolfwelsch8570
    @rolfwelsch8570 Před rokem

    your sounds like Ivan Micolji

  • @aquadise1007
    @aquadise1007 Před 2 lety

    Can we keep discus and adoketa in the same tank?

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +1

      yes, no problem. In nature they do not occur together, and I.adoketa is from much more acidic water, but in teh aquarium it is no problem.

    • @aquadise1007
      @aquadise1007 Před 2 lety

      @@belowwater Thank you so much that you reply me. Do you think adoketa can still breed in the same tank with discus?

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +1

      @@aquadise1007 Yes, as long as you have enough structure/complexity on the bottom: Some sticks and leaves etc, seed pods, so the breeding adoketa are not getting disturbed by the discus.

    • @aquadise1007
      @aquadise1007 Před 2 lety

      @@belowwater Thank you very much.

  • @jojyp
    @jojyp Před rokem

    In your opinion is it really possible to wild discus (F0 Generation) in a breeding tank (100 liters)?

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před rokem +1

      you mean breed wild discus in 100 litres ? i think that is a bit small.

    • @jojyp
      @jojyp Před rokem

      @@belowwater My actual question is what are the water parameters (TDS, ph, temp, gh, and kh) we need to set for breeding a wild discus pair?

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před rokem +1

      @@jojyp I think that can vary, but in nature something like pH 6.2, GH almost 0 and temperature of 30C would be around normal. I think the condition of the fish and soft water are most important, the actual pH may not be that crucial. But a a wild discus breeder would be much better at answering that question.

    • @jojyp
      @jojyp Před rokem

      @@belowwater soft water means low tds??? what’s the TDS range that can give better or positive results??

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před rokem +2

      @@jojyp yes, as low as possible. I do not measure TDS in the field, but most of these habitats have no measurable hardness.

  • @user-eo9ml2kk3l
    @user-eo9ml2kk3l Před rokem

    Вода кажется такой мутной,не ожидал что такие не очень мягко говоря условия

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před rokem +2

      Google Translated: эти места в низменности Амазонки динамичны, уровень воды колеблется вверх и вниз, а главный рукав Амазонки еще более мутный. я думаю, что это действительно помогает дискам, когда они размножаются, так как хищники также имеют ограниченное зрение

  • @pacae911
    @pacae911 Před 10 měsíci

    Minute 10:20
    88F ???? that is ridiculous, come on !!! Nothing survives in that temperature

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 10 měsíci +1

      in the US people measure temperature in Fahrenheit, 88 degrees Fahrenheit is equivalent to just over 31 degrees Celsius.

    • @pacae911
      @pacae911 Před 10 měsíci

      @@belowwater
      So with the discs it is impossible to replicate its habitat, the only way I see it would be a glass aquarium with a heater and its filter without anything else, an empty space without life only with the discs and it would be a horrible aquarium 🫠

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 10 měsíci

      @@pacae911 - you could replicate the bushes they breed in, with a number of upright branches and some leaves at the top. But yes, the habitat of the discus is not spectacular in the sense of having many aquatic plants etc.

  • @YannHoiret.Fanatik-discus

    Oliver, you should change the parameters of your CZcams Chanel, i cannot be updated of your new videos because « Below Water channel » is registered on CZcams in « Videos for childrens »

    • @belowwater
      @belowwater  Před 2 lety +1

      You must unsubscribe and resubscribe, then it will be possible! It is a bug in CZcams....if you subscribed early on this is the easiest fix.

    • @YannHoiret.Fanatik-discus
      @YannHoiret.Fanatik-discus Před 2 lety +1

      @@belowwater Ohhh yeah.... Now I'm sure not to miss a single one... 😊

    • @YannHoiret.Fanatik-discus
      @YannHoiret.Fanatik-discus Před 2 lety +3

      @@belowwater I do not remember to ever seen this kind of images of discus breeding in their natural habitat.... Wow... congrats