How to Tell if Your Fish Is Pregnant

· emilynakatani · 8 min read
How to Tell if Your Fish Is Pregnant

Table of Contents

Pregnant vs Egg-Carrying: An Important Distinction

Technically, only livebearing fish get “pregnant” in the true sense of the word — they carry developing young internally and give birth to free-swimming fry. The most common livebearers in Singapore aquariums are guppies, platies, swordtails, and mollies.

Egg-laying species like tetras, corydoras, and angelfish do not get pregnant. Instead, females develop eggs internally, become visibly swollen, and then release (spawn) the eggs externally to be fertilised by the male. The signs look similar but the process is fundamentally different.

This guide covers both scenarios so you know exactly what to look for regardless of which species you keep.

Signs of Pregnancy in Livebearers

If you keep guppies, platies, swordtails, or mollies, your female fish will almost certainly become pregnant if males are present. Here is what to watch for.

The Gravid Spot

The gravid spot is the single most reliable indicator of pregnancy in livebearers. It is a dark patch located on the belly near the anal fin, towards the rear of the fish. This area darkens as the developing fry grow inside — you are essentially seeing the eyes and bodies of the developing babies through the mother’s translucent belly wall.

  • Early pregnancy: The gravid spot is a subtle dark mark, sometimes barely noticeable.
  • Mid pregnancy: The spot darkens considerably and becomes more prominent.
  • Late pregnancy: The spot is very dark (almost black) and may appear enlarged. In lighter-coloured fish, you can sometimes see individual fry eyes as tiny dark dots.

Squared-Off Belly

As the fry develop, the female’s belly grows noticeably. In the final days before birth, the belly often takes on a distinctive boxy or squared-off shape rather than a smooth curve. This squared profile is a strong indicator that birth is imminent — typically within 1 to 3 days.

Behavioural Changes

Pregnant livebearers often display distinct behaviour changes as they approach delivery:

  • Seeking hiding spots among plants, near the heater, or in corners
  • Reduced appetite or refusing food entirely in the final hours
  • Staying near the top or bottom of the tank rather than swimming mid-water
  • Shimmying or resting in one spot for extended periods
  • Aggression towards males that attempt to mate

Gestation Periods by Species

Gestation length varies by species and is influenced by water temperature. In Singapore’s warm conditions (28–32 °C), gestation tends to be on the shorter end of the range.

Species Gestation Period Typical Brood Size Notes
Guppies 21–30 days 20–50 fry Can store sperm for months; females may produce multiple broods from a single mating
Platies 24–30 days 20–40 fry Very prolific; can also store sperm
Swordtails 24–30 days 20–80 fry Larger females produce larger broods
Mollies 28–35 days 20–60 fry Prefer slightly brackish water for best health, though they adapt to freshwater
Endler’s Livebearers 23–28 days 5–25 fry Smaller species, smaller broods but very frequent

In Singapore’s warmer water, expect gestation closer to the lower end of these ranges. A guppy in a non-air-conditioned HDB tank at 30 °C may deliver in as little as 21–23 days.

Recognising Egg-Carrying Fish

Egg-laying species do not get pregnant, but females carrying mature eggs display visible signs that are worth knowing.

Swollen Belly

Female tetras, barbs, rasboras, and corydoras develop noticeably rounder bellies when they are full of eggs. This is especially obvious when compared to slimmer males of the same species. The belly appears evenly rounded rather than boxy (unlike livebearers).

Breeding Behaviour

When egg-laying fish are ready to spawn, you may notice:

  • Males chasing females more actively than usual
  • Corydoras “T-position”: The male and female form a T-shape during spawning, with the female collecting sperm before depositing fertilised eggs on glass, leaves, or hardscape
  • Angelfish cleaning a surface: Paired angelfish meticulously clean a flat surface (leaf, glass, slate) before the female lays rows of eggs on it
  • Tetras scattering eggs: Most tetras are egg-scatterers — the female releases eggs among plants while the male fertilises them

Species-Specific Egg Signs

Species Signs of Egg-Carrying Female
Cardinal/Neon Tetras Rounded belly; blue stripe may appear curved due to body shape
Corydoras Visibly plumper when viewed from above; may become very active (swimming up and down) before spawning
Angelfish Swollen belly; extended breeding tube (papilla) visible near the anal fin
Gouramis Rounded belly; males build bubble nests at the surface as a spawning trigger
Cherry Shrimp Yellow or green saddle visible behind the head (eggs in ovaries); berried females carry eggs under the tail

What to Do When Your Fish Is Pregnant

Once you have confirmed your livebearer is pregnant, you have a few options depending on whether you want to raise the fry.

Option 1: Let Nature Take Its Course

In a well-planted tank with dense cover — Java moss, Hornwort, Water Sprite, or floating plants like Salvinia — some fry will naturally survive by hiding from adult fish. This is the most hands-off approach and allows natural selection to play out. In a heavily planted aquascape, survival rates of 20–40% are common.

Option 2: Use a Breeding Box

Breeding boxes (small plastic or net containers that hang inside the tank) isolate the pregnant female so fry drop through slots into a safe compartment. However, breeding boxes are controversial for good reason:

  • They stress the mother, which can delay birth or cause complications
  • Poor water circulation inside the box
  • Timing is tricky — put her in too early and she is stressed for days; too late and she delivers in the main tank

If you use a breeding box, place the female inside only when birth appears imminent (squared belly, very dark gravid spot, hiding behaviour) and remove her immediately after delivery.

Option 3: Separate Tank

The ideal setup is a small, cycled tank (20–40 litres) with a gentle sponge filter and dense floating plants. Move the pregnant female a few days before expected delivery. After she gives birth, return her to the main tank and raise the fry separately. This is less stressful than a breeding box and gives fry the best survival rate.

Helping Fry Survive

Whether fry are born in the main tank or a separate setup, a few factors significantly improve survival:

  • Dense plant cover: Java moss, Guppy Grass, and floating plants provide essential hiding spots
  • First foods: Newly hatched fry can eat crushed flake food, powdered fry food, or live infusoria and baby brine shrimp for optimal growth
  • Stable water quality: Small, frequent water changes (10–15% every 2–3 days) with dechlorinated water. Remember to use a conditioner that handles PUB’s chloramine
  • Gentle filtration: A sponge filter is ideal — it provides biological filtration without sucking up tiny fry

For a detailed guide on breeding and raising guppy fry specifically, see our article on how to breed guppies.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a female fish be pregnant without a male in the tank?

Yes — female livebearers can store sperm from a previous mating for up to 6 months. If you buy a female guppy, platy, or swordtail from a local fish shop, she has almost certainly already been mated and may produce several broods without ever seeing a male in your tank.

My fish looks fat but I am not sure if she is pregnant. What else could it be?

A swollen belly is not always pregnancy. Other causes include constipation (especially from overfeeding dry food), bloat (bacterial infection), dropsy (organ failure — look for pinecone-like raised scales), or simply being well-fed. If the swelling is accompanied by lethargy, loss of appetite, clamped fins, or raised scales, it is likely a health issue rather than pregnancy.

How often do livebearers get pregnant?

Very frequently. Female guppies can produce a new brood every 21–30 days. If males are present, females are essentially pregnant continuously. This is why population control is a genuine concern — a single pair of guppies can produce hundreds of offspring within a few months. Keeping only females or only males is the simplest way to prevent breeding.

Should I separate the fry from the adults?

If you want maximum survival, yes. Adult livebearers, including the mother, will eat their own fry. In a heavily planted tank, some fry will survive without intervention, but if you want to raise a specific number, a separate grow-out tank is the most reliable approach.

Planning a Breeding Setup?

Whether you are dealing with an unexpected livebearer pregnancy or planning a deliberate breeding project, having the right tank setup makes all the difference. At Gensou, we design custom aquariums for every purpose, from display aquascapes to dedicated breeding systems. With over 20 years of experience in Singapore, we can advise on filtration, planting, and stocking for optimal fry survival. Visit us at 5 Everton Park or contact us to discuss your needs.

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