Anableps males seem to have two major interests - eating and mating. Compatible mating
leads to pregnancy. Quite often the first reliable sign that a female is pregnant is a
change in body shape. She loses her slender silhouette and becomes tubby in the abdominal
region. Although this is very evident in the picture below, sometimes the change is not
very noticeable and we have been surprised by a small number of babies from a female we
didn't think was pregnant.

A pregnant female Anableps
As you will see, it's important to understand the
process involved in egg fertilization and embryo development in order to provide the
necessary environment for successfully raising the young. Anableps babies are sometimes
aborted and each fetus always has the gut protruding out of a split-like opening in its
belly. Even when the babies are born alive, the opening can still be seen with, sometimes,
a bit of the gut protruding. Infection and the resulting death can easily happen if the
tank water is less than ideal. I'll try to explain the little that I've been able to find
out about the internals of Anableps pregnancy. Keep in mind that this is the result of
reading and deducing and not from any scientific research of my own.

Healthy newborn resting on a rock
Consider follicles. The most common ones are found
around hair roots. These are hair follicles like the ones I used to have on top of my
head. The ovaries of animals, including female Anableps, have egg follicles which form a
sack of cells around each egg. Apparently, mature eggs are not completely surrounded
because impregnation by the male sperm happens within the follicle. This isn't all that
unusual and for some livebearing fishes the embryo then grows and develops using only the
food supply in the egg. The gestation period for such fish is fairly short, (about a
month), and the babies are quite tiny at birth. It's somewhat different for Anableps. The
first part of the embryo to develop is the gut and tiny vascular protruberances on the
follicle wall make contact with it and allow it to take i nourishing fluids. he gestation
period is much longer - approximately 3 months, and it's only at the end of that period
that the rest of the body "catches up" with the development of the gut and the
gut ascends into the body cavity. If all goes perfectly, babies from 1.5 to 2 inches (4-5
cm) long are born with only a slight opening or even just a line along the abdomen left as
evidence of the process. It's an imperfect world ad probably due to conditions in our
tanks which wouldn't be present in nature, baby Anableps are sometims born before the gut
has completed its journey into the body cavity. These pictures show that if, as we did,
you provide sterile conditions, the necessary development will continue to a successful
conclusion even after birth. We used an antibiotic, (Chloramphenicol), frequent water
changes and only live food in this case. Five out of the seven premature babies survived.
Fortunately, we ad many successful births where no such strenuous measures were needed.

Note the "red" guts still partly
exposed


Above are two photos of one of those babies
some days later when it seemed safe to move it to a glass
bottomed bowl for for an underneath photo.

A week after birth - success!

A netful with no problems

Twelve of the 13 - a few weeks old

Babies are being born here and my camera is
ready
The babies look like miniatures of their mother at birth and, even though mother Anableps
often grew to 10 inches (25 cm) in our tanks, (12 inches in nature), such large babies
severely limit the number possible per spawn. Although one of our large females aborted 20
fetuses, (so we assume that many are a possibility), our most successful spawn was 13
live, healthy babies. Since then we understand that a fellow hobbyist, Carl Krajniak from
Michigan, had a very large female which gave birht to 16 live babies. Spawns like this
don't seem like much compared to the 100 plus babies you can get from a swordtail or a
Molly, but Anableps require more space and care. At one time we had 52 of them including
adult, half-grown and babies from several generations and they made life very interesting
and very busy in our fish room.

Once again mother "Bleps" just
won't cooperate by letting me film a birth!
One of my goals has been to photograph an actual
birth. I have come quite close, but not quite. Between us, Pat and I have witnessed 2
births, both of which were tail first. So far, although I've had my camera ready when
births were taking place, mother Anableps simply wouldn't pose where I could get a shot. I
hope to try again in the future.