The Life and Times of Fathead Minnows
by Dale Speirs, Calgary Aquarium Society
originally published in The Calquarium Volume 42, Number 5, January 2000
Aquarticles
INTRODUCTION
The fathead minnow, Pimephales promelas, is commonly sold as a baitfish and, in
the aquarium trade, as a feeder fish. They are cyprinids that spend their time dashing
frantically about along the bottom of the tank or trying to burrow through the glass in a
corner of the tank. Typical brainless cyprinid behaviour. However, there is one
distinctive difference from the usual cliche of cyprinids that aquarists expect. These
minnows are not egg-scatterers as are most cyprinids. They are parental caregivers who
guard the nest cichlid-style. I found their spawning behaviour quite fascinating. They are
certainly cheap to buy, and easy enough to breed that you can pick up a few BAP points
while observing some interesting behaviour.
BASIC ECOLOGY
Pimephales promelas is widely distributed across North America. It is tolerant of
a wide variety of conditions in water chemistry. It begins spawning at about 18C water
temperature, so it does not need a heated aquarium. Spawning is done frequently in stages,
rather than an annual or occasional occurrence. This species is omnivorous, and thus easy
to feed. It is short-lived, not usually beyond two years of age [1]. There are two
varieties, the normal and the rosy-red (which is more of an orange-yellow). The latter has
a lower growth rate than the normal [7].
This species is timid in the aquarium, and prefers to school. The fry that I have
raised tend to travel in midwater, while adults stay closer to the bottom. Schooling is an
anti-predator tactic used by many fish [6]. A predator attacking a school of fish has a
difficult time picking out one individual from all the others and tracking it in the
confusion. More fish together also means more eyes to keep watch.
BREEDING BEHAVIOUR
The spawning of Pimephales promelas is fairly complex. The first sign is when the
male develops a wen on his forehead. If you dont know what a wen is, youve
seen them on fancy goldfish, which are also cyprinids. These are what look like tumorous
growths on the head, often with little tufts of white cotton during their development.
Hood growths on goldfish such as orandas are merely an artificial selection for increased
size of wens. Tubercles or hard white pimples develop on the forehead and gill covers, a
sign that the male is ready to breed.
The male fathead minnow stakes out an overhanging ledge or cave and begins defending
this territory against all comers. Once a female has been lured in and courted, the eggs
are laid on the underside of the ledge in a monolayer. The male guards the eggs until they
hatch. He may entice several females into spawning, in which case the final hatch will be
a genetic mixture of half-siblings [2]. Fully-conditioned females can lay 200 to 700 eggs.
The eggs hatch in 4 to 8 days, depending on water temperature [4].
As far as the practical details are concerned for the aquarist wanting to set up a tank
to breed these fish, an overhanging slab of rock makes the best location for spawning. It
is better if it is not more than about one centimetre over the substrate, just a big
enough gap for the minnows to squeeze under. This gives room for the fish and allows them
to rest on the substrate while standing guard. Since Pimephales promelas is a
bottom-dweller, there is no point in making a high stack of caves as you might for
cichlids, since the minnows will not venture up into the water column. This species can be
spawned in caves made of PVC pipe sections [3], which while practical, is not very
aesthetic.
SPAWNING IN THE AQUARIUM
I seldom paid much attention to the fathead minnows I used as feeders for my cichlids.
However, one day I noticed a few small fry darting about in the minnow holding tank, so I
decided to spawn them in a more formal setup. I set up a 45-litre tank with incandescent
lights and an airstone but no heater. The airstone should provide turnover of the water
column but at not too high a rate, as turbulence will interfere with feeding by the fry
[8]. The tank was on the main floor of my house (in the kitchen, actually, right by the
sink) which, like most post-WW2 houses of its age, overheats in the summer and gets chilly
in the winter. The water temperature varied with room temperature and ranged from 20C to
about 28C. The latter temperature was reached after the fry were a couple of months old,
by which time the summer heat had begun.
Several rocks were placed in the tank in such a fashion that they created overhanging
ledges. The bottom third of the tank was filled with filamentous algae and Java moss. The
airstone was set to provide a strong flow of water. There was no filtration but a 25%
weekly water change was done using fresh tap water. The female was placed into the
aquarium a few days ahead of the male. Because they had previously spawned, I knew they
were a pair, but in any event it was easy to separate them. The female was plumper than
the male. The male, when added to the tank with the female, developed a clear wen on his
head.
The first spawning, as with subsequent spawns, took place on the underside of an
overhanging ledge. The female laid the eggs but then immediately turned around and ate
them. A week later, another batch of eggs was laid. The male guarded these eggs, swimming
in a figure-eight pattern continuously under them. The female showed no interest in the
eggs, so I removed her. The day after the eggs were laid, the eyes were visible. On the
fourth day the eggs were gone. I was uncertain as to whether the male had eaten them or if
the fry were simply well hidden. As it turned out, the fry were seen the next day, having
apparently dispersed after hatching into the thick profusion of algae. The male was
removed at this time.
The fry were transparent and 5 to 6 mm in length. One fry was a goer and grew quickly
to about 1 cm total length, while the rest stayed in the same growth cohort. For most of
the first three months the fry were exposed to continuous light, the canopy seldom being
turned off. The algae and its associated infusoria provided food for the fry. When they
were a little older, crushed and finely-powdered flake food was supplied twice a day.
After three months, the orange colour had developed. the fry were slow growing and were
averaging about 1 cm in total length at this time. They were somewhat clumsy at catching
food, although this could be a matter of taste discrimination. Minnows generally eat food
particles about two-thirds of their mouth size and go after moving targets [5]. In still
water, they pick out the active food particles, such as live food or sinking flakes.
REFERENCES
1] Duffy, W.G. (1998) Population dynamics, production, and prey consumption of fathead
minnows (Pimephales promelas) in prairie wetlands: a bioenergetics approach. CANADIAN
JOUR. FISHERIES AQUATIC SCIENCES 54:15-27
2] Page, L.M. and P.A. Ceas (1989) Egg attachment in Pimephales (Pisces:
Cyprinidae). COPEIA, pages 1074-1077
3] Norman-Boudreau, K., and G.R. Daggett (1989) Improved design for fathead minnow
breeding chambers. PROGRESSIVE FISH-CULTURIST 51:111-112
4] Sargent, R.C. (1989) Allopaternal care in the fathead minnow, Pimephales
promelas: stepfathers discriminate against their adopted eggs. BEHAV. ECOL.
SOCIOBIOL. 25:379-385
5] Scott, A. (1987) Prey selection by juvenile cyprinids from running water. FRESHWATER
BIOLOGY 17:129-142
6] Magurran, A.E. and T.J. Pitcher (1987) Provenance, shoal size, and the sociobiology
of predator-evasion behaviour in minnow shoals. PROC. ROYAL SOCIETY LONDON 229B:439-465
7] Ludwig, G.M. (1995) Growth and survival of two colour varieties of fathead minnows
in deep and shallow ponds. PROGRESSIVE FISH-CULTURIST 57:213-218
8] Landry, F., T.J. Miller, and W.C. Leggett (1995) The effects of small-scale
turbulence on the ingestion rate of fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) larvae.
CANADIAN JOUR. FISHERIES AQUATIC SCIENCES 52:1714-1719
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