I suppose the most asked question I get from Corydoras keepers is, 'How do I sex them'. A simple enough question you may think but the answer is never quite as easy as that. There are several factors that need to be looked at, with a lot depending on the species involved.
There are three main areas of difference, Body, Fins and Colour. When buying new stock it can often be a very difficult task to determine the sexes, freshly imported fish can be especially difficult depending on their overall condition on arrival. Newly imported fish are often under fed, having been kept in holding tanks awaiting dispatch, sometimes going for weeks on end without any food at all. In such cases it is a good idea to buy at least six specimens and condition them up. Generally speaking Corydoras are hardy little creatures and it does not usually take very long to get them into reasonably good condition, making it far easier to determine the sexes.
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Born in Birmingham in 1946.
A toolmaker by trade, and self confessed Corydoras nut by admission
I started keeping tropical fish in 1970 in a small 18 inch aquarium, it was not very long before I had two, four foots and two three foots set up in the spare room. Overthe first two or three years I kept and bred many of the popular fish groups. Starting with South American Cichlids, graduating through Barbs, Anabantids and Characins. Although I had kept several species of catfish during this period it wasn't until early in 1973 that I took an active interest in them. From when I bred my first species of Corydoras in 1974 I have been well and truly hooked.
My first fish house took shape in 1977 and was a sectioned off part of my garage, which housed 36 - 18 x 18 x 12 inch tanks. It was then that I started seriously breeding Corydoras a project which still continues to this day in what is now my third fish house.