FAQs on
Cyprichromis
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Cyprichromis, stkg. 10/11/08
Hello all and thanks in advance for your help. Wondering if you could
tell me how many Cyprichromis Tri-color I could put in a 90 gallon.
They will be the only fish in the tank. Thank you very much. Phil
<Mmm, I would try one (or two) male/s and a handful of females,
allowing room for growth and reproduction here. Much more to be perused
of worth by inserting the string: "stocking density for
Cyprichromis" in your search tool/s. Bob Fenner>
Re: Cyprichromis, stkg., sys.
10/14/08
Sir, I did enter the search string but did not come up with the
information regarding stocking level. I believe I have done this
correctly. An additional question. What algae eating species would be
appropriate with Cyprichromis. I am looking just to keep algae off
Texas holey rock. Thanks much. Phil
<Hi Phil. Cyprichromis are open water, sardine-like fish so the
watchword here is "space". Apart from a few Vallisneria
around the edges of the tank, they don't really need much by way of
decoration. So choose the biggest tank you can get, or more
specifically, the longest tank, so they have ample swimming room. The
size of the school is critical because the males can be bullies even
though they're also a schooling species that becomes nervous when
kept in too small a group. It is widely recommended you keep groups of
8 or more specimens, with more females than males, ideally 2-3 females
per male. A school of eight 12 cm Cyprichromis leptosoma for example
will need a tank upwards of 300 litres (80 or so gallons). There are
some smaller and/or less feisty species that might not need *quite* so
much space, but don't try and wedge these fish into substantially
smaller tanks. Do also remember to offer lots of water movement,
ideally using filters and/or powerheads so that the water turnover rate
is upwards of 8x the volume of the tank, ideally 10x. In other words,
if the tank is 300 litres in size, use a filter (or filters) delivering
turnover around 2400 to 3000 litres per hour. When choosing algae
eaters for any Rift Valley tank, a lot depends on the other species in
the aquarium. Assuming all you were keeping was Cyprichromis, then
Nerite snails, Ancistrus catfish, and perhaps even Amano shrimps would
all be viable (the shrimps might be eaten, but are cheap and so would
be worth a shot). But other cichlids may be more or less hostile to
such algae eaters, either viewing them as food or competing with them
for space in the rocks. I'd perhaps grab some Nerite snails and see
how they worked; a couple of dozen or so should keep a 300-400 litre
tank nice and clean. They will thrive in the hard, well oxygenated
water your Cyprichromis desire. Cheers, Neale.><<Outstanding!
B>>