![]() I'll post photos when I can figure out how to do that. It’s an African cichlid native to Lake Malawi in East Africa. By the way, the subdominant male is nice I'd have him as the dominant male in one tank, and use your current dominant male to run another line in another tank, since they are showing different coloration. Cichlids Large red empress Large sunshine peacock Large white OB peacock Large Snow White mbuna 2 yellow labs, One large one small Medium venustus cichlid Large johanni cichlid Large Blue acara 2 Large blue zebra mbuna Small unknown peacock Juvenile tropheus Duboisie cichlid 2 bristlenose plecos, albino and non albino. They are also very intelligent and highly interactive, though they don’t require as much one-on-one time as the flowerhorn. The red zebra cichlid ( Maylandia estherae) is a colorful fish species with a big personality. If no other fish was involved, then you should get OB Albino fry. They seem to fight less when I move things around, is this common? Should I just rearrange everything every 2-weeks or will that stress them out more than getting mean and territorial? Due to their pretty mottling, body shape, and red nuchal hump with mottling, it is theorized that this cichlid makes up part of the flowerhorn. So now what? How many of those little dudes should I keep? There's lots of rocks and plants in the tank, but I don't want to overcrowd it.Īlso, does anyone else keep a catfish with the cichlids? She's getting into it with the two males (the OB and the Yellow), she can hold her own but is getting banged up now that dad is getting all protective of the kiddos. ![]() In addition to the two fish above (or now 12 I guess) I have an Electric Yellow Lab, 4 adult Siamese Algae Eaters and one 19 year old Synodontis I've had since it was 3/4" long, she's 5-6 inches now. It's a 55 gallon planted tank, fluval 304, I've kept it for about 20 years. So I didn't mess with it to give them a place to hide and now they're growing up. It appears 6 are blue and 4 are OB (but they look like green camo right now). It originated when a male Aulonocarawas crossed with a female Mbuna. I have 10 new fish, theyve grown up to about 3/4' long. I went to clean out the tank a month ago- I have java moss that gets a little out of control, and found little fry living in it. OB is a term used for Malawi Cichlids with unique spotted patterns. It appears 6 are blue and 4 are OB (but they look like green camo right now). Several hundreds species of cichlid are found in Lake Malawi, along with many regional variations, but Lake Victoria has far fewer due to the introduction of. I have 10 new fish, they've grown up to about 3/4" long.
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