GloFish Zebra Danio Green (Danio rerio) Breeding Guide
Breeding the fluorescent green GloFish zebra danio: underlying Danio rerio egg-scattering method, plus heritable transgene and licensed-propagation status.
Overview
The green GloFish zebra danio is a genetically modified Danio rerio carrying an inserted green fluorescent protein gene (GFP originally extracted from a marine organism, per Wikipedia). It is a patented and trademarked brand; some GloFish reproduce naturally and the fluorescence is heritable, but intentional breeding and any sale, barter or trade of GloFish offspring is strictly prohibited under the licence. Spawning biology is identical to the wild zebra danio, an egg-scattering spawner with no parental care (Seriously Fish).
Sexing
Per Seriously Fish, female zebra danios are typically rounder-bellied, slightly less colourful and a little larger than males, with the difference clearest in spawning condition as males intensify in colour and females fill with eggs.
Conditioning
Condition the adults together on a varied diet including small live and frozen foods, then move conditioned fish to the breeding tank as one or two pairs once the females are full of eggs (Seriously Fish).
Breeding Setup
- Half-filled, very dimly lit breeding tank with a mesh, plastic grass matting or dense Java moss base so eggs fall out of reach (Seriously Fish).
- Slightly acidic to neutral water, towards the upper part of the species' 18-25 C maintenance range.
- A small power filter directing flow along the tank length, swapped for a mature sponge filter after spawning to protect fry.
Spawning Behavior & Trigger
Spawning is triggered by adding small amounts of cool water every few hours and offering small live and frozen foods; pairs typically spawn the following morning, scattering eggs over the base (Seriously Fish). The transgene is inherited normally, so fry from two green GloFish parents fluoresce.
Egg & Fry Care
Adults eat the eggs and are best removed after a couple of days. Incubation takes about 24-36 hours, with the fry free-swimming a few days later. First food is Paramecium or a 5-50 micron proprietary dry food, progressing to Artemia nauplii and microworm as the fry grow (Seriously Fish).
Common Challenges
Beyond egg predation, the key constraint is legal: GloFish are patented and trademarked, and intentional breeding or sale of offspring is prohibited under the brand licence, with the line also restricted in some jurisdictions (Wikipedia). Hobby breeding therefore should not be undertaken for trade.