The Wildlife Garden Project | A guide to fish in your wildlife pond

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  • čas přidán 7. 12. 2017
  • www.wildlifegardenproject.com
    Jack Perks talks us through which fish species will live happily in your wildlife pond, as well as giving some tips on making sure your pond is a suitable habitat for fish and other wildlife.
    About The Wildlife Garden Project:
    Imagine if everybody in the UK made just a few small changes in their garden to help our British wildlife. Think of the giant patchwork that could be created, all the habitats that could be formed, and all the mouths that could be fed. And you can do as much or as little as you like!
    Here at The Wildlife Garden Project, our aim is to provide the information and inspiration for people across the country to create their own little patch for wildlife. So our team of volunteers has assembled together more articles, videos, photos and tips than you can shake a stick at, all in one handy location - www.wildlifegardenproject.com.
    Get practical advice and information on gardening, identify the new creatures who have visited your garden, or find out more about them in our ever growing wildlife section and learn new tips and techniques with our videos. Ask for and offer advice and connect with other wildlife gardeners on our forum, and browse through our photos or even add your own in our gallery.
    It doesn't matter whether you live in the countryside or in a city, whether you own 50 acres or just a balcony, everyone can do their bit. So sign up, watch the videos, read the info and join in the discussions in the forum, but most importantly, GET WILDLIFE GARDENING!
    Music: "Open Those Bright Eyes"
    Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...

Komentáře • 52

  • @davidpotter3361
    @davidpotter3361 Před 5 lety +7

    Great video. Yes, 3 spine sticklebacks are good for a wildlife or any fish pond come to that. They are interesting to watch, self populating and will eat mossie and gnat larva etc. If you do catch sticklebacks from the wild, make sure they have no white spot and look healthy. Could quarantine them for a while in a fish tank! Shame so many garden ponds have gone. Use to be a must have in a garden back in the 60s and 70s.

    • @wildlifegardenproject
      @wildlifegardenproject  Před 5 lety

      Yes, we definitely need more garden ponds! They are such a wonderful habitat for so many creatures.

  • @nickygreenfingers
    @nickygreenfingers Před 4 lety +5

    Beautiful, I love to encourage wildlife , I’m a landscape gardener & love this work with nature 😊

  • @GardinersPlot
    @GardinersPlot Před 6 lety +10

    i have both 3 spined and 9 spined in my pond. i put some in last year and they bred and have done again this year. they great for keeping down mosquito larvae and dont destroy the pond. ill be doing an update on my pond in my next video.

  • @juggerireland
    @juggerireland Před 3 lety +2

    This is great thanks so much.

  • @pierswarren4465
    @pierswarren4465 Před 3 lety

    Top work Jack and Laura! x

  • @jesusacevedo9692
    @jesusacevedo9692 Před 6 lety +1

    I love this video

  • @alinn9172
    @alinn9172 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow super

  • @charlotteoneill5199
    @charlotteoneill5199 Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you for this video! We are going to have a pond soon and I was wondering about native fish we could be able to stock it with.

  • @danprescott2256
    @danprescott2256 Před 2 lety

    I have 3 roach in a allotment pond I build 2 years ago. They are doing so well and I dont use a filter either

  • @StellarSailor
    @StellarSailor Před 3 lety +2

    Hey, thank you for the video. It’s really helpful. I’m looking for some 9 spine sticklebacks for my native pond project. Are you aware of anywhere I can get them? I’d be happy to purchase a few off of yourself.

  • @Biffo1262
    @Biffo1262 Před 2 lety +3

    You missed the best one, the Minnow. They do require moving water though so I have an artificial gravel bed stream from my filter box. They are thriving and breeding plus they co-habit well with my Sticklebacks.

  • @peteandrew5502
    @peteandrew5502 Před 6 lety +1

    lovely concise video, what are the tall yellow flowers please? I guess they're good for pollinators?

  • @christophersavill4785
    @christophersavill4785 Před 3 lety +2

    Add fish and say goodbye to your tadpoles and young newts

  • @parabugsknowingtheunknown.

    Do you have a pump or do they need one?

  • @lloyddavies9683
    @lloyddavies9683 Před 3 lety

    Where did you get the 9 spines?

  • @Williegillan
    @Williegillan Před 4 lety +2

    Just created a wildlife pond in my garden , I have some tadpoles in it just now , what small fish would be best to add that won't feed on the tadpoles ? Thanks

  • @dorianleakey
    @dorianleakey Před 2 lety

    I thought i had minnows in my pond, but perhaps they are sticklebacks?

  • @AZTEC_ARTS2023
    @AZTEC_ARTS2023 Před 4 lety +1

    How deep must a pond be (for fish), for winters in Canada (down to -30 degrees celsius sometimes) ?

    • @dorianleakey
      @dorianleakey Před 2 lety

      Jesus, asking a Brit wildlife channel this, we have poor summers but our winters are mild, we wouldnt know.
      Logically, likely quite deep, how deeo do the rivers freeze? Like he said native fish semi hibernate, if they have some water, it should eb enough.

  • @mattevans923
    @mattevans923 Před 2 lety

    I have two golden tench, a common carp, and the rest koi carp, however I want to build a pond that only has the species that occur naturally within the British Isles, dace, roach, rudd, crucians, loach, barbel, etc etc, I’m thinking Barbel could grow too big for the pond however, also I won’t be introducing predators like perch pike and zander for obvious reasons, I can keep perch in my indoor tank, one of my favourite fish species perch, catch them at the local canal.

  • @shanemaguire7874
    @shanemaguire7874 Před 6 lety

    if i released say a 2-4 inch carp into a small pond in a mountain with plenty of aquatic life and left it on its own, would it survive?

    • @ganggang2558
      @ganggang2558 Před 6 lety

      Shane Maguire most likely not.

    • @shanemaguire7874
      @shanemaguire7874 Před 6 lety

      What if every couple of days I sprinkled a few maggots in?

    • @ganggang2558
      @ganggang2558 Před 6 lety

      It'd be a possibility. Is the pond healthy?

    • @shanemaguire7874
      @shanemaguire7874 Před 6 lety +1

      I assume so, there is lots of tadpoles,beetles,aquatic worms etc, etc and the water is quite clear and deep.

    • @derekskinner
      @derekskinner Před 3 lety

      If would be fine

  • @prisonmike1798
    @prisonmike1798 Před 3 lety +10

    For a wildlife pond I wouldn’t actually recommend any fish, they either disturb sediment making it impossible to see the wildlife, or eat the beneficial insects and invertebrates that help to keep the water clean

    • @marcusbaldwin9627
      @marcusbaldwin9627 Před 2 lety +4

      Nope, again a huge generalizatio and common misconception, that is why Jack has just presented these 4 species.

    • @prisonmike1798
      @prisonmike1798 Před 2 lety +5

      @@marcusbaldwin9627 from my own experience I’ve found that sticklebacks quickly over-populated my pond and very few newts/tadpoles were surviving past their larval stage as they were predated all the time. The original 3 sticklebacks I put in quickly became 300, and since I drained and removed them all, the water clarity has been a lot clearer and the invertebrates are thriving. Just my personal experience. It also depends massively on the size of your pond but once the stickleback population outgrows (which they inevitably will) the pond ecosystem is out of balance

    • @theworthysoul
      @theworthysoul Před rokem

      It’s true that fish don’t really help wildlife and instead can cause problems. I only had a few for fun in my small pond but I’ve decided against having them in my next bigger pond.

    • @claudiostraniero4919
      @claudiostraniero4919 Před rokem +2

      Fish them

    • @jimmyfaulkner5746
      @jimmyfaulkner5746 Před 10 měsíci

      How bigs your pond ? Mine is 16" x 10" x ( tear-drops sweetie shape) and 3" deep in the middle . Was thinking of adding some stickle backs and a green tench , just wondering what you class as small because I had to argue with the council over the size of mine because your only allowed a 'small wildlife pond' . The head biodiversity officer told me to fill it in or lose my plot this spring so I got the environmental officer to put him in his place 😂 , was your pond pretty bare in terms of pond plants ect? I have partially submerged logs deep water plants , plenty of crevasses overhanging shrubs , rocks to hide behind once the fish go in they ain't coming out again . Any response would be greatly appreciated, you won't stop getting them but but would be good to know if my situations similar to your own . Cheers and God bless

  • @843thebear
    @843thebear Před 6 lety +1

    Are there any reputable places where we can purchase Sticklebacks from in the UK?

    • @JackPWMedia
      @JackPWMedia Před 6 lety +1

      I recommend MF Aquatics its where I get mine from or DC Freshwater Fishes
      www.mf-aquatics.co.uk/product-category/native-fish/

    • @843thebear
      @843thebear Před 6 lety

      Thanks

    • @shanemaguire7874
      @shanemaguire7874 Před 6 lety

      You can catch them in the wild

    • @cliffcarlo180
      @cliffcarlo180 Před 6 lety

      I did contact MF Aquatics eventually got a reply from a text message. No reply from the email I sent. The text message said their Sticklebacks were too small yet for despatch (out of stock on the website), however, they were strangely available on their eBay site and would be delivered in 2 days. Strange that.

  • @steveblack255
    @steveblack255 Před 5 lety +1

    Lots of exposed liner around his pond, needs to get that sorted.

  • @leobodiam7950
    @leobodiam7950 Před 5 lety +2

    Are you allowed to take fish from the wild for your pond? My local river is very clean and the fish that live there are healthy, would I be able to take one or to?

  • @philliporion9806
    @philliporion9806 Před 3 lety +1

    Crussian carp and Tench are not suitable for garden ponds unless you have a small swimming pool size one, id also argue that there not suitable for wildlife ponds, their bottom feeders so what do you think they're feeding on? "disease-free from dealer or garden center" this made me laugh as there where most of the diseased fish come from.

    • @marcusbaldwin9627
      @marcusbaldwin9627 Před 2 lety

      10m x 10m is fine for both species you mention, the same size as you'd recommend for GC Newts. If your pond is healthy and balanced you'll have no problems in fact they will help to maintain that balance in a larger pond. Would you not recommend allowing Newts in a pond because they eat inverts? As it goes the Crucian is of far greater conservation concern than GC Newts for instance. Do agree with the Garden centre comment though.

  • @derekskinner
    @derekskinner Před 3 lety +1

    Fish will only grow to the size of the pond , and you obviousy know very little about Tench and Cruicians etc.

  • @cliffcarlo180
    @cliffcarlo180 Před 6 lety +3

    I did have a look at the fish provider you mention in your clip, they are not cheap by anyone's standard. Are you seriously suggesting to people that they part with their money when purchasing a few fish for their wildlife pond( 10 stickleback £38) just to sit back and watch a heron or kingfisher devour the lot one by one. I don't think so Jack.

  • @rockyhighwayroad7365
    @rockyhighwayroad7365 Před 5 lety +2

    WTF, no filter no aeration what is this guy thinking?

    • @wendyg46
      @wendyg46 Před 5 lety +3

      Its a Wildlife pond,not supposed to have filters,fountain or aeration ok to have though

  • @user-id8cl5zd9e
    @user-id8cl5zd9e Před 5 lety +1

    U kinda did a bad job with the pond