How to Breed Molly Fish

82

By Laura Philips

Breeding Fish - Mollies (Poecilia)

Molly fish are livebearers, what this means is that instead of laying eggs like many other types of fish, the eggs are fertilized inside the fish and a pregnant molly fish will release live fry (baby fish). There are a few common types of livebearers that are common in the home aquarium, these include, mollies, guppies, swordtails and platies.

Before you consider breeding your fish you should be aware that if you are successful you will need a lot of space in your tank for your new fish (if you intend to keep them). Molly fish can release fry once a month for around three months and can release anything from a few fry to over a hundred each time so you have to be able to look after them, at least until they are old enough to be moved on or sold.

As far as tropical fish go, Molly fish are extremely popular, given the right conditions they are easy to look after and an attractive addition to any aquarium. To breed Molly fish is not a difficult task, in fact if you have a few mollies in your tank (as long as there is a male molly) and you let nature take its course you may well get tiny fry in time. But most aquarium owners will at some stage consider breeding their fish.

Below you will find the specific's that will help you to successfully breed your molly fish and care for the fry.

How to Tell the Difference Between Male and Female Molly Fish

This is a male molly fish, you can see the difference in the anal fin (gonopodium)
See all 2 photos
This is a male molly fish, you can see the difference in the anal fin (gonopodium)
The female molly fish has a more fan like shape to the anal fin.
The female molly fish has a more fan like shape to the anal fin.

Molly Fish Breeding Tips

Molly fish will breed without any help from you, as long as your tank is set up to their liking and you have at least one male and a couple of female mollies. It is usually best to have only one male and make sure that the females outnumber the male. For instance in my own tank I have one male molly and four females and this setup seems to work quite well for me.

How to tell if your Molly fish is Male or Female

Unlike some other fish, it is easy to tell the difference between livebearer's such as mollies and swordtail's. Female molly fish are usually plumper than the males but this alone is not a great indication. The best way to find out the sex of your molly is to look at the anal fin. On the female the fin is normal looking but the male molly has a different type of fin called a gonopodium whereas the female molly has a fan like anal fin.

Which Type of Mollies Can I Breed?

Molly fish are all the same species so any molly can breed with another despite the differences in them, for instance any color molly fish can breed with another giving a wide variety of colorful fish. I have 6 molly fish in my tank currently and every one is distinguishable from the other by coloring and pattern. Likewise a pot bellied molly can breed with sailfin (Poecilia latipinna) molly and so on.

Is my Molly Fish Pregnant?

How to Tell if your Molly fish is Pregnant

More often than not, female mollies are pregnant if they have been in a tank with a male in the last 3 or 4 months or so. Molly fish are pretty easy to breed and because a female molly only needs a male around for short time to release fry every month for 3 or 4 months afterwards. In other words once she gets pregnant, she will not need another male for a couple of months at least and during that time she will give birth several times.

You can tell when your molly is pregnant by her belly swelling up, this actually can happen quite quickly and it normally takes 6 to 8 weeks for the first batch of fry to be released. Another way of telling is by looking for a gravid spot, but this is not always reliable.

How Can I Tell When my Pregnant Molly is Ready to Release Fry?

This is not so easy to tell and is learned from experience, you may notice a change in behavior in your fish, she may want to distance herself from other fish or might start eating more or less food than she normally would. It can be hard to tell unless you know what to look for and each fish can act differently when the time comes. Even if you have been watching your fish carefully you may miss the event but because they release fry so often you should be able to begin to notice behavior changes for the next time she is ready.


Caring for Your Pregnant Molly

There are a few things you can do to help your pregnant molly fish, firstly the conditions need to be right for her to release her fry. Below are the conditions that should help her on her way.

  • Keep the temperature between 78 and 82 degrees F. If after a few days she hasn't released it and the temperature is at 78, you can try raising it by 2 degrees to see if it will make a difference but do not put it any higher than 82.
  • Feed her well, give her a mixed diet, flake food is fine but try and add frozen blood worms etc every other day.
  • Do regular water changes, in my opinion every other day is adequate, change 20% of her water every second day.
  • Keep her away from other fish, other fish, especially the male molly can stress a female that is close to releasing her babies. If she becomes too stressed she may not release them or she will release them too early.
  • You can add some aquarium salt to the water although I have not found this necessary in my aquarium.

As long as you do the above you should have little problems breeding mollies.

Molly Fish Giving Birth

Comments

davenmidtown profile image

davenmidtown Level 7 Commenter 9 months ago

Great hub!!! Did you know that Molly's can be acclimated to live in salt water fish tanks?

Laura Philips profile image

Laura Philips Hub Author 9 months ago

Thanks, no I haven't tried that but I know they are good adapters although some would disagree..

Even in a tropical tank they benefit from an addition of aquarium salt although it isn't necessary for them.

davenmidtown profile image

davenmidtown Level 7 Commenter 9 months ago

many tropical fish like a little salt in their water. One of the benefits of adding salt to freshwater tanks is that the salt helps the fish to extract the oxygen from the water. This is one of the reasons it is important to add some salt if the water in the tank is warmer. Warmer water holds less oxygen.

flyboy19 8 months ago

my white molly is starting to turn yellow. Do you know what is going on?

cmlindblom profile image

cmlindblom Level 2 Commenter 8 months ago

nice hub. already knew how to breed just checking out how you do it. it's good you should check out my breeding clownfish.

PC 8 months ago

Good fish article. These mollies (molly fish) are easy to breed and can be in every color under the sun but I still prefer the black molly.

Laura Philips profile image

Laura Philips Hub Author 8 months ago via iphone

Yes I had a beautiful black mollie, unfortunately she passed away. Molly fish are one of my favorite live bearing fish, I also keep swordtails, I love their coloring but find them a bit aggressive, thanks for your comment!

Laura Philips profile image

Laura Philips Hub Author 8 months ago via iphone

No I'm sorry I have never seen that with my white mollies, I would imagine yhough that she may be sick. I hope she is ok..

flyboy19 8 months ago

no he's not sick

Laura Philips profile image

Laura Philips Hub Author 8 months ago via iphone

Did you find out what it is? I would be very interested to know..

flyboy19 8 months ago

no but he is starting to chance back

flyboy19 8 months ago

ok now i think it is a mutant because he is getting some neon blue spots on him

akshay 7 months ago

my fish is givin birth now but on some websites it says it take 2 hours to make 26 and u say over night and do you need a net breeder for planted aquariums

Carly 7 months ago

Where can I sell my extra fry?

Camille 2 months ago

My female mollies look pregnant but never release any fry! I even saw my male Molly mate with one of the females and he belly got big and then no fry! What could be causing this?

Hans 2 months ago

I bought a molly tank 3 months ago,I have 12 mollies but none of the has given birth in the past 3 months, do you think my males mollies are gay? is it the temperature?I don't have an aquarium heater. I live in the philippines which is a tropical country.

Laura Philips profile image

Laura Philips Hub Author 2 months ago via iphone

I doubt your male molly fish are gay! However it will depend on the age of your fish, the tank conditions etc. A pregnant molly fish will not release her fry if she is stressed and in a new tank ( i would still consider a 3 month old tank relatively new) it can take a while.

Another possibility is that you may have missed a release of fry, its unlikely but possible. Give it a little more time and if you still see no sign in a month but your fish are otherwise triving I would slightly alter the tank conditions.

You should be able to tell the temperature of the tank from your tank thermometer if its too low you will need a heater.

Laura Philips profile image

Laura Philips Hub Author 2 months ago via iphone

I had this happen with one of my first mollie fish, she was stressed and held on to her fry too long which resulted in a lot of dead baby fry later on when she eventually released them, sadly she didnt recover from it either.

This may not be the case with your molly, just keep a close eye on her she may not be ready just yet!

janet 8 weeks ago

how many days do mollie fish take to grow to their full size

ajk 3 weeks ago

my male just smells the fmale but ut dosent do any thing its been four days since i brout him

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    Please wait working