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Thread: ORA mandarins!!!

  1. #1
    Join Date
    08-06-2007
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    Default ORA mandarins!!!

    I just saw on another board that ORA will soon be releasing captive bred mandarins. Additionally, these fish have all been trained to eat frozen food!!

    Sweet, I know what my next fish will be!!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    05-23-2009
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    LaVernia, Texas
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    Very cool! Wittenrich had been alluding to commercially captive breds for awhile. I was wondering when it was going to happen.
    Since they take such special care (smallest larvae) and time I wonder how they are able to make it profitable. I hope people will be willing to pay the price.
    Last edited by Europhyllia; Wed, 24th Mar 2010 at 04:42 PM.
    Karin



  3. #3

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    Here's [link]an article[link] about them from Glassbox Design.

  4. #4
    Join Date
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    Karin -- considering the wide variety already being bred by ORA, the foods necessary are probably available already (I'd imagine they have a wide range of live foods being produced in the facilities -- they've always shown to be more about doing it right than turnover for profit)... Especially considering that they're directly tied to research facilities in Florida (if I recall correct), food variety is probably wide. I expect em to be pricey, but not like the RCT angels were when available -- those took a lot more work, and had exceedingly high mortality rates in the spawns.

    -Justin

  5. #5
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    Yeah, I was just wondering if people could appreciate that even S rotifers would be too big for mandarin larvae. It's the major challenge in breeding them.
    To raise them in large numbers you'd have to have access to large amounts of a tonsa eggs or similar (much less efficient than cranking out rotifers).
    Last edited by Europhyllia; Thu, 25th Mar 2010 at 12:53 PM.
    Karin



  6. #6
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    ORA was born out of an aquaculture/oceanic research facility -- their access and availability is likely a big boon for ORA itself. I mean -- I fully expect these to hit the market at a retail of about $100 at first, maybe higher -- this has been a long time coming I think they'll be able to manage it well enough to realistically bring the cost down over time, just as all their tank bred efforts have...

    -Justin

  7. #7
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    Very cool. I read about it in the April issue of Coral last year and even wrote Wittenrcih to see how soon. Very exciting!
    Karin



  8. #8

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    One of my favorite topics... and such an exciting measure of progress for this field!
    http://www.millan.net/minimations/sm...riumsmile1.gif - Kristy and Mike -

    210 g reef tank started 3/15/08; 20 g hex reef tank started 1/3/08, ended 3/30/14

    "I must be a mermaid.... I have no fear of depths and a great fear of shallow living." - Anais Nin
    "To travel is to take a journey into yourself." - Danny Kaye

  9. #9
    Join Date
    10-10-2007
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    San Antonio, TX
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    Default

    Wow that sounds awesome, mandarins are cool looking fish but so hard to feed.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    08-06-2007
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    Quote Originally Posted by edshas2 View Post
    Wow that sounds awesome, mandarins are cool looking fish but so hard to feed.
    That's the exciting part, these won't be hard to feed.

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