FAQs on African Cichlid Identification 4
Related Articles:
African Cichlids,
Malawian Cichlids: The Mbuna and their Allies By Neale Monks,
The Blue Followers: the Placidochromis of Lake Malawi by Daniella
Rizzo,
Related FAQs:
African Cichlid ID 1,
African Cichlid ID 2, African Cichlid ID 3, African Cichlid ID 5, & African Cichlids, African Cichlid Selection, African Cichlid Behavior, African Cichlid Compatibility, African Cichlid Systems, African Cichlid Feeding, African Cichlid Reproduction, African Cichlid Disease, Cichlids of the World, Cichlid Systems, Cichlid Identification, Cichlid Behavior, Cichlid Compatibility, Cichlid Selection, Cichlid Feeding, Cichlid Disease, Cichlid Reproduction, & Malawi Cichlid Systems, Tanganyikan Systems,
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Re: fish id, possibly Krib? 7/7/12
Aha! Thank you. These fish were in an overstocked 15 gallon and I have
moved them to my 100 gallon. This Mbuna is quite bossy to the blood
parrots; nipping at them.
<Is what they and most Mbuna in fact do when kept with dozy tankmates.>
Should he be removed or should we introduce another Mbuna to see if that
takes his attention?
<Add another Mbuna and chance are he'll kill it. These fish are very
aggressive. Melanochromis auratus are best kept in busy (some would say
overstocked) systems with larger, similarly aggressive Mbuna species,
for example Pseudotropheus zebra, Pseudotropheus lombardoi and
Labeotropheus fuelleborni. It should not be kept with less aggressive
Mbuna like Labeotropheus trewavasae or Labidochromis spp., and neither
should it be kept with unaggressive Malawians, including Aulonocara spp.
Of course, it can also be kept in a single-species set-up, and this is
probably the idea because it's the females that are really pretty in
this case. But as with other Mbuna, if you do this, keep lots of females
per male because the males can be very hard on them; I'd keep 5-6
females, at least, to be honest.>
Thanks,
Kevin
<Welcome, Neale.>
Re: fish id, possibly Krib? 7/7/12
Neale,
I appreciate your input here. I believe I need to clarify my intentions
a bit more. I would like to create the best environment for the Blood
Parrots (if possible) without removing the Melanochromis.
<Good luck on that…>
Do you believe it is possible to keep him in the 100 gallon tank either
by adding additional tankmate(s) or some other way to divert his
attention from pestering the parrots?
<More shelter, cover for the Parrots may help, but Parrots are stupid
and slow-moving, and being bred for looks rather than self-defence, they
don't hold their own well with cichlids that evolution has hard-wired to
be aggressive. Yes, 100 gallons is a fair amount of space for fish this
size, and you may get lucky and find the Melanochromis auratus stays
mostly at one end, and the Parrots eventually learn to stay at the other
end. But that's about as well as this system/community will work.>
Perhaps adding another female of this or similar species (you mentioned
below)?
<Nope. Turning this into a Mbuna aquarium has some merit, and 100
gallons gives you a decent amount of space to work with. Furthermore,
some commercial aquarium providers (e.g., for airports and shopping
malls) have thrown Parrots into such Mbuna systems. But these aquaria
tend to be more for show than anything else, and if fish die/need
replacing every few months, well that's fine because it's all covered in
the monthly contract. As hobbyists, we have different standards, goals.>
Moving him to a new environment is not something that I am equipped to
do and I would hate to pass him on to someone if we can avoid it.
However, I do not want to endanger the constitution of those
"dumb-but-cute-looking" parrots.
<Melanochromis auratus simply isn't a species you can throw into a
collection of cichlids and expect to behave itself. Adding more fish (of
different species) provides more targets to be sure, and that means any
one fish won't be subjected to constant aggression, in theory at least.
Do read up on Melanochromis auratus; it's a well-known troublemaker, and
there's a hearty literature on stocking, maintaining Malawian cichlids.
Most anything by Ad Konings will set you up well, but you'll find the
writings of Paul Loiselle and Mary Bailey, among others, highly
relevant.>
Thanks,
Kevin
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: fish id, possibly Krib? 7/7/12
on to more research. Thanks for the pointers and the direction!
<Most welcome. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: fish id, possibly Krib? 7/7/12
on to more research. Thanks for the pointers and the direction!
<Oh, and one quick thought. Since Melanochromis are Mbuna that rarely
stray far from rocks, if you build a pile of rocks at one end with lots
of hidey-holes, you may get lucky and find the Melanochromis stays more
or less in that one spot, and the Parrots could move about more freely
elsewhere. No guarantees though! Neale.>
Re: fish id, possibly Krib? 7/8/12
Awesome. I will give this a try! Thanks again.
<Keep a close eye on them. As I said, there's no guarantee. Cheers,
Neale.>
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Cichlid, ID 6/20/12
Hello crew! Everyone i talk to cannot identify this fish, i would really
appreciate if you could! Thank you!
<It's a Pseudotropheus of some sort, of the type often marketed as the
Pseudotropheus "Orange Blotch". Whether it's a hybrid
or a true species is hard to say from a photo. Most of the ones sold in
typical aquarium shops are hybrids. In any case, it'll be much like
Pseudotropheus zebra in care. Needs good quality (low nitrate!) hard,
alkaline water; gets to about 12-15 cm/5-6 inches in length; will be
highly territorial, even psychotically aggressive; and needs to be kept
in a (large) Mbuna aquarium rather than a standard community tank.
Mostly herbivorous, so its diet should be based around green foods and
algae-based flake, with meaty foods like bloodworms and standard flake
used sparingly. Cheers, Neale.>
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Cichlids 5/13/12
How can I tell what kinda
<…kind of…>
African cichlids are these
Thanks, Kial
<No, not from this photo, no. If sold as "mixed African cichlids" at a
pet store, they're almost certainly Pseudotropheus hybrids,
typically similar to Pseudotropheus zebra in size, colours, and
psychotic levels of aggression. Cheers, Neale.>
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Re: Cichlids, repro. Af.
5/14/12
I looked up Pseudotropheus hybrids an that's what they are, thanks, how many
times a yr can they breed, they did once already an I've had them since Jan,
they had the babies in march.
<... read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/afcichreprofaq2.htm
and the linked files above. Bob Fenner> |
Identifying Cichlids
ID Two Lake Malawi Cichlids 4/16/12
Hello and thank you for your consideration in advance for reading this
message.
I was hoping that I could get some assistance in identifying two cichlids
that I recently rescued from Wal*Mart (got new fish tanks and burned out
pumps, bad stuff), and at first I was thinking they might be yellow labs as
they had the coloration, but after being in my tank for a few days, it seems
that their color has come back to them! I've attached two pictures, the
first picture is what I was told is a Kenyi, but recently I've been getting
varied ideas and conflicting identification. Oddly enough, when I first
introduced him, he had a pale/pink hue and now, as you can tell is much more
yellow in color. I've been told Kenyi, Lab, and hybrid. The second picture
is what I personally suspect as a Red Zebra male, but as both fish are
relatively young, I do respect the idea that they may not have their true
colors yet.
Anyway, again I thank you for consideration and taking the time to read this
message, and I would like to say thanks for this awesome website again!
< The first fish definitely has some lab in it, but is not a Ps. kenyi. It
is probably a lab red zebra cross. The second picture looks like a poor
quality red zebra.-Chuck>
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Cichlid Question! 12/20/11
Guys & Gals,
<Hey Dan>
Thanks for all you do for the hobby and help us all care for our
aquatic animals. All of you are a great help to us out here who
love the hobby but don't have a lot of experience. My
question is pretty simple and straight forward (hopefully). Can
you tell me what type (name) of the cichlids that are
contained in this picture?
<Mmm, yes, Lamprologus brichardi...>
Which one is the female and which one is the
male?
<Mmm, likely the bottom fish is female, the larger a
male>
I know at least one is male and the other is female because the
other day I had little babies all over the bottom of my tank.
Again thanks for your help and any assistance in helping keep the
babies alive and what they eat would be much appreciated.
Dan
<Best to have you search WWM, the larger Net re.
Congratulations! Bob Fenner>
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Fish ID
Lake Malawi Cichlid ID 10/12/11
Is this fish an electric blue Ahli? What is the scientific
name?
Thanks in advance!
<No. This looks to be a cross between an electric blue and
some sort of Mbuna. Probably a Metriaclima zebra.-Chuck>
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please identify, Af. cichlids...
2/4/11
Team
I am currently deployed to the Mideast theater and have the
privilege of keeping an African Cichlid tank, but unfortunately
the fish are not labeled in the pet shop so I have no idea what I
do have and I have several different ones. Need to know exactly
what they are whereby I may be able to care for them properly.
Hope you can help. Thanks much for your time and assistance.
Jewel
<These would appear to be Aulonocara, the colourful ones the
males, the females normally silvery-brown. Basic care is
straightforward provided you keep them by themselves in a hard
water aquarium and don't mix them with anything else (for
example Mbuna such as Pseudotropheus zebra). Do read here for the
details:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/MalawiPeacocksAulonocaraMaryB.htm
Cheers, Neale.>
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Fish Identification? -- 04/03/10
I was hoping you might be able to tell me if the big one in the
single fish pic is a female rusty or a female afra?
<It may be a female Iodotropheus sprengerae, but could be (too
likely) a cross... an Mbuna hybrid>
I rescued afra's and rusty's from two different people
who had nowhere to put them and now I don't know which one
this one is. I do know it is a female for sure because it is
holding.
<Agreed>
Then there is these three little ones that I am not 100% positive
about. I am pretty sure the ones that have the blue coloring are
afra but I have no idea what type.
<Again...>
The brownish looking one in the back is the one I have no idea at
all what it is. Could it be a female afra?
<Possibly. Am going to place your query in our resident
Cichlid expert, Chuck Rambo's in-folder... He's traveled
to, dived in Lake Malawi... Maybe he's seen your fishes up
close and personal!>
Thank you so much for your help
Mary
<Cheers, Bob Fenner>
Re: Fish Identification? -- 04/03/10
Bob, I really appreciate it again thank you so much!
Mary
<Welcome Mary. BobF>
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Fish Identification?
Lake Malawi Cichlid ID 4/6/10
I was hoping you might be able to tell me if the big one in the
single fish pic is a female rusty or a female afra? I rescued
afra's and rusty's from two different people who had
nowhere to put them and now I don't know which one this one
is. I do know it is a female for sure because it is holding.
Then there is these three little ones that I am not 100% positive
about. I am pretty sure the ones that have the blue coloring are
afra but I have no idea what type. The brownish looking one in
the back is the one I have no idea at all what it is. Could it be
a female afra? Thank you so much for your help Mary
< It is not a rusty but probably not an afra either. The mouth
looks wrong to be an afra. I would guess that it is a cross
between a Ps. zebra and another Malawi cichlid. This happens all
the time when people keep assorted Malawi cichlids together and
then pass off the fry as a single
species.-Chuck>
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