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Sex. It is one of the most basic drives in nature.
The urge to mate, to procreate, to pass on one's genes. A key
ingredient in life, it can spawn ecstasy, longing, and sometimes, even
murder--and all this in your aquarium! One of the most fascinating, educational, and
satisfying aspects of the hobby is having your fish and invertebrates
make new fish and invertebrates. This is doubly appealing to aquarists
who are inherently cheap (like yours truly), and would rather have
their livestock increase without actually spending any money. It's
gratifying to see those creatures in that little biotope you've
created multiply, even though you've had absolutely nothing to do
with it, aside from supplying at least one of each sex. But therein
lies the rub. I can't get no satisfaction, the Stones noted during
the sixties, and, double-negative aside, neither will your fishes, if
potential mates are simply not available.
Casual Sex: Endler's Livebearers
(Poecilia wingei)
Unlike the closely related Fancy Guppy
(Poecilia reticulata), which favour the old sneak-mate, Endlers
give a girl a little show, a little tease, a little regardez moi. A
large portion of their time is occupied with displaying to females;
fins flared, bodies rigid and trembling, showing off the goods. Not
that any of this seems to make the slightest impression on the females,
but you have to admire the males for putting a bit of effort into the
thing. So where do you find Endler females? Avoid
retailers where females are unavailable and males are housed/hybridized
with Guppies. Your best bets are local aquarium clubs/auctions, where
pure Endlers (male and female) are quite popular. Slow Sex: Dwarf Gouramis (Colisa
lalia)
As with other Anabantoids, the male builds a
surface bubble nest, usually against some leafy material, and drives
away all intruders. If a ripe female approves his efforts, she will
nudge him insistently, and the pair will begin to slowly circle until
the male finally wraps her in a rigid embrace. They remain immobilized,
until a sudden shower of eggs prompts the male to release her and
gather them to spit in his bubble nest, while the female flits away.
They will repeat this process for
hours. The intense inbreeding necessary to realize these
myriad colour morphs have effectively ruined the species. Now when I
visit my local retailers, I see tanks crammed with dozens of sickly
male Dwarf Gouramis. Even the wild-type Dwarf Gourami has become
scarce. What a pity that the beautiful, peaceful, hardy Dwarf Gourami
has become a sickly, fleeting aquarium resident. The gaudy
intensely-farmed imported Gouramis are often infected with bacterial
infections and the fatal Dwarf Gourami Iridovirus. For this reason,
Dwarf Gouramis should always be purchased from local breeders, where
females may be obtained. Purchasing healthy, wild-type stock, breeding
them, and sharing the fry with fellow aquarists can help bring back the
healthy Dwarf Gouramis of days gone by.
There's nothing like a guy in tux and tails to
turn a girl's head. And to a female Rainbowfish, there's
nothing like a male in intense, iridescent colour to lure her into the
Cabomba. But that gorgeous colour has a cost; it attracts predators,
and males aren't going to foolishly flaunt it if there are no
females around. Fish control their colour via colour-pigments
cells called chromatophores (from the Greek chromato = colour + phore =
bearer), which are influenced by environment, health, and sex. A male
without females will simply not turn on his colours to their fullest
extent. Black, controlled by melanophores (Greek, melan=black) will be
grey, reds and yellows (controlled by xanthophores and erythrophores)
will be washed out. You can feed your males all the colour-foods you
like, but without females, they will never realize their full
potential. A shoal of only males is not only boring to the
fish, but to the aquarist. There's no flirting, no sparring, no
colour; just a bunch of fish hanging around with no purpose, like
teenage boys outside a convenience store. Morning sun to Rainbowfish is like piping a little
Barry White through the sound system; it puts them in the mood. Males
flash their dazzling colours at females and challenge each other to
harmless skirmishes while the sunshine glances off their iridescent
bodies. They soon pair off to spawn amidst much trembling and shaking
against fine-leaved plants. It's one of the most brilliant displays
known to aquarists, but you won't see it unless you keep females,
so house them in shoals of at least six, with equal numbers of each
gender. Female Rainbowfish of the sexually dimorphic
species such as Red Rainbowfish (Glossolepis incisus), Wanam
Rainbowfish (Glossolepsis wanamensis), Boeseman's
Rainbowfish (Melanotaenia boesemanni), Parkinson's
Rainbowfish (Melanotaenia parkinsoni), and Threadfin Rainbowfish
(Iriatherina werneri) are, for the most part, silvery-grey. As
with many nondescript females, they can be elusive. Retailers often
carry only the colourful males, and if they do happen to have females,
they are often housed in mixed species tanks, making it difficult for
the uninitiated to determine which female belongs to which species.
Some Rainbowfish species are capable of hybridizing; aquarists should
take care to obtain pure species so Rainbowfish in the hobby are not
polluted with hybrids as with Lake Malawi Cichlids.
The better retailers will order in females if they
can acquire them from suppliers, but farms often cull the drab females
or use them for feeder fish. If you are unable to find females through
local breeders, try ordering them through your local retailer anyway.
If enough aquarists express interest in females, suppliers and
retailers will ensure supply meets demand. Rough Sex: Lake Malawi
Cichlids Ruthlessly driving off unresponsive females, rival
males, and anything else that gets in their way, Lake Malawi Cichlids
like it rough. Violently vibrating, chasing, and digging, the males
desperately lure females to the spawning sites they've excavated;
their urgency intensifying when ripe females are near. If a female
acquiesces, the pair will circle, alternately nuzzling anal fins,
releasing eggs and sperm. If she changes her mind, he will chase her,
nip her, even kill her. If she survives, she'll be left with
tattered fins, missing scales, and a mouthful of viable eggs. Yes, life
for a captive female Malawi Cichlid is rough. In the wild, females
would merely swim away from insistent males if not ready or willing to
mate. They don't have this option in an aquarium. To make it easy
on your females, provide at least 200 litres (50 gallons) for milder
Malawians like Electric Yellows (Labidochromis caeruleus), Rusty
Cichlids (Iodotropheus sprengerae), and some of the smaller
Peacocks (Aulonocara spp). More aggressive species will require
at least 285 litres (75 gallons). Most Lake Malawi Cichlids are polygamous
mouthbrooders, so you'll need one male to two-or-three females.
Don't choose species based on what looks pretty at your
retailer's, rather, research each species and choose those that
have generally the same level of aggression and won't
hybridize.
There's been a trend to keeping male-only
Malawi Cichlid aquariums. But the very males you've chosen for
their colour will never display it properly without females. And like a
cute but boring boyfriend, after a while the good looks just won't
cut it. But the constant soap opera of males courting females, the
dedication of females holding fry for a month without food, and the
delight of catching a glimpse of a baby Cichlid staring back from the
mouth of a holding female, vastly outweigh a tankful of bored (and
boring) males. Trading some of those bored males for females is a great
idea, but where do you find them? The females of sexually dimorphic
species, especially Peacock Cichlids (Aulonocara spp.) are drab
grey, hard to find, and look nearly identical; it can be difficult to
know with any certainty that they will be the same species as your
male. If you do find a tank of males and females together at your local
retailer, they are likely to be siblings. It is best to purchase the male and females from
separate trusted sources to avoid inbreeding and prevent hybridization.
Always use scientific names rather than common names when making your
purchase. Reputable breeders are will provide pure species -- and
females. No Sex: Scarlet Badis (Dario
dario) They roam the aquarium like miniature tigers,
hunting tiny prey and threatening rivals via quivering fins and fierce
lunges. Scarlet and ice-blue vertical stripes intermingle on this
fish's jewel-like flanks; Scarlet Badis make a stunning addition
for those wanting a bottom-dweller other than the usual catfish, and
can be kept in a tank as small as 40 litres (ten gallons). Too bad
they're so hard to find. With retailers' tendency to carry big,
flashy, easy-to-sell fishes, topping out at 1.5 cm, the tiny Scarlet
Badis is often overlooked and unavailable. Yes, Scarlet Badis males are
difficult to find, but females? Almost impossible. Females are a
non-descript silver-grey, and exporters simply do not export them.
Female Scarlet Badis truly are the holy grail of the aquarium, and this
is a shame, because aquarists who manage to procure the rare female
Scarlet Badis report fascinating accounts of fiery dancing males,
Anabantoid-like embraces and dedicated paternal
guarding. So where do you find females? You've got me.
Unlike many of our prior candidates, Scarlet Badis are rarely available
through aquarium clubs or local breeders. Retailers almost never import
females. There are accounts of the occasional female being mixed in
with imported males, but this is rare. Count yourself lucky if you have
a Scarlet Badis female, and try to breed them, so you can share your
luck (and any female offspring) with fellow aquarists. Spinsterhood: Cherry Red Shrimp (Neocaridina
heteropoda) I'm still looking for that one perfect male.
In desperation, I've placed ads, responded to ads; I even thought I
had him once. The elusive male Cherry Red Shrimp. As the females in my
tank approach the grand age of two years, their numbers are beginning
to decline. Like a venerable group of heavily-rouged old maids, they
will never know motherhood, because here, the tables are turned. It is
the female who sports that cherry-red exoskeleton, while the male is
largely colourless. Consequently, imports from the Far East, which
supply many retailers, consist almost exclusively of
females. Many of the mail-order outfits so ubiquitous in
the United States may offer both sexes, but ship only within their
borders. If they do ship to other countries, the cost is often
prohibitive; a recent inquiry netted a quote of thirty-five dollars for
shipping one shrimp to Canada. In northern climates, heat packs are
often required, which only adds to the cost. Occasionally sellers
surface on Aquabid offering both males, females, and reasonable
shipping rates, but with lots of one hundred or more. The knowledge
that there are hobbyists who are overrun with the things is salt on the
wound. So where can you find Cherry Shrimp males? Just as
I was completing this article, I noticed a new ad on a local online
list-service. Last night I picked up a dozen Red Cherry Shrimp; over
half of them males. Once again, fellow hobbyists are the
key.
Abstinence Of course, the sexes of not all species should be
housed together. Some species, like Bettas (Betta splendens),
should be brought together only under carefully controlled conditions.
Others, like Jewel Cichlids (Hemichromis bimaculatus), become
murderous when spawning. And some, like Convict Cichlids (Cichlasoma
nigrofasciatum) will produce enough fry to supply the North
American market for several decades. As always, it is critical to
research each species prior to purchase. Sex Changes Everything The dearth of drab females points to a disturbing
trend. We cannot blame retailers; they supply only what sells. We, as
aquarists, have forgotten how privileged we are, to be able to unlock
the secrets of those creatures from that other world; those foreign
water-breathing creatures who inhabit our planet's most ubiquitous
life-giving substance. Now we choose single specimens like pretty
baubles, or to complement our décor. We use words like dull, drab, or nondescript to
describe females with little colour. But even the plainest female is a
thing of beauty; a flashing silvery-gold affair of metallic scales and
translucent fins. And our bejewelled males are best set off by the
precious metal of females.
References Images 2. This
male Pseudotropheus acei (right) puts on a show for a
similarly-coloured female -- drab females are not so lucky -- plain
looks can cost them their lives. Photo © Judy
Helfrich 3. An
Endler male in hot pursuit. Photo © Judy
Helfrich 4. This
intensely-bred 'cobalt blue' morph typical of those offered at
retailers (right) doesn't bear much resemblance to the wild-type
Dwarf Gourami (left). Photos © Neale Monks 5.
Melanophores (dark areas). Photo © Judy
Helfrich 6.
Melanotaenia boesemanni--the fish on top is a male, the one
below is a female. Keep equal numbers of both to see your males exhibit
their best colours! Photo © Neale Monks 7. This
Labidochromis caeruleus male displays lacklustre colour. Photo
© Judy Helfrich 8. The same
male after the introduction of females. Note the deeper blacks,
especially on the anal and ventral fins. Photo © Judy
Helfrich 9. A mixed
group of male and female cherry shrimps; the smaller males are
essentially transparent while the females are bright cherry red. Photo
© Neale Monks
10.
This female Peacock Cichlid (Aulonocara stuartgranti) may
seem plain, but she can play an important role in your aquarium. Photo
© Judy Helfrich |
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