Things You'll Need
- Spawning mops
- Air stones
- Liquid fry food
- Powdered fry food
- Brine shrimp larvae
- Hard-boiled egg yolk
- Koi pellets
Instructions
Provide spawning mops that fry will attach to.
Newborn koi fry instinctively try to hide and will attach themselves by the head to spawning mops in the tank. At this stage, baby koi have no mouth, swim bladder, fins or vent. Don't feed koi fry at this stage; they survive by feeding off their egg sac, which is still attached.
Use air stones to provide plenty of oxygen to the tank.
For two or three days of life, baby koi breathe by absorbing oxygen through the fine blood capillaries that surround the egg sac which is still attached to the gut. It's essential that fry receive enough oxygen. Monitor that air stones are functioning properly at all times or the koi babies might die.
Watch for fry to begin swimming.
After two or three days, fry will develop fins, a mouth and other organs. At this stage, they will head to the top of the tank, gulp a few breaths of air into their swim bladder. This allows them to begin swimming freely in the tank. Fry then gather around air stones, a sign they are ready to be fed.
Feed liquid fry food frequently for the first week.
Fry should be fed small amounts four or five times a day as they are developing. Also offer strained hard-boiled egg yolk for the first couple days to help increase the size of their stomachs.
Offer newly hatched brine shrimp larvae after one week.
The brine shrimp larvae are small enough for fry to eat at this stage.
Switch from liquid to powdered fry food at week two.
Continue to increase the size of food offered as fish grow for the next three or four months.
The main consideration is that the food is small enough for the fry to eat, has high protein content and is offered several times a day. Debris and waste need to be removed frequently, as fish develop the ability to eat.