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My first ever cichlids!!



 
 
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  #11  
Old December 23rd 04, 04:13 PM
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On Thu, 23 Dec 2004 15:00:24 GMT, "Gary"
wrote:

Auratus are moderately aggressive. The dominant male (the one that
turns dark first) will try to kill any other males but may tolerate
females. If you pack them in and have a few hiding places at the
surface you will have less problems. Make an island with rocks all the
way to the surface.




Hi Steve,

There must be almost 100 hidy holes at the moment, I will post a few pics.
When you say make an island, work from the centre of the aquarium up to the
top?


It not the number of hidy holes that count, it is the position so that
fish in trouble can escape.

I use a pile of large boulders up the rear corners of the tanks. That
way it is easy to make an island (or two) without displacing too much
water.

AT the moment, I have heavily loaded the entire back wall with Marble Rock,
Sand Stone and SHED LOADS of Lava Rock.

I will post a pic of feeding time, and as well as seeing the rockery, you
can help me identify the other fish too! (If you can be bothered)


I'll have a look later.


Steve
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  #12  
Old December 23rd 04, 06:25 PM
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On Thu, 23 Dec 2004 15:35:22 GMT, "Gary"
wrote:

OK Steve,

All pics under 100k

Links to the pics he http://www.cutecats.co.uk/cichlids.asp and also
pasted below.


ROCKWORK:
http://www.cutecats.co.uk/cichlids/cichlid-rocks.jpg


The rocky shoreline of Lake Malawi is mainly boulders covered in
algae.

I always tried to produce something vaguely similar.

Do your best with the fish, Im intrigued as to how these guys are going to
behave in the future. The fish shop chap told me they would be fine...


I've been away from the Mbuna world for too many years to remember
their common names and many of the scientific names have been changed
as well.

Go to Mike Oliver's web page and click on Mbuna.
http://malawicichlids.com/index.htm

Mike Oliver has been into Mbuna a long time and is still active in the
field.


Steve
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  #13  
Old January 5th 05, 11:59 AM
Craig
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One article i read about mbunas was to silicon ALL of the rocks into a
wall, then lean the wall against the back of the tank, so it mimics the
sheer rock drops in the wild. This will create tons of space in the for
ground for feeding and general movement, create more strategic hiding
holes and when i fish dies, it wont be absolute murder finding it

Im a south american man myself, and not much good with africans(i know
their mean as anything though)

If you do add more fish REALLY keep a clsoe eye on the water params as
youll get a big spike, but if you do slowly introduce the fish, moving
the decore around (atleast with south american cichlids) really does
spread out the aggression.

Good luck, the fish sound like there in very good hands.



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  #14  
Old January 5th 05, 08:14 PM
Amateur Cichlids
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"Craig" -DONTEMAIL wrote in message
...
snip
(i know their mean as anything though)
snip

While this generalization can be true of many of the cichlid species, both
African, Central American and South American alike, it is too broad a
generalization for "African Cichlids". If you like the South American
cichlids, perhaps you should expand into some of the West African species.
They share much of the same behavior and water parameters you're currently
used to.
Then delve into some of the milder Rift Lake species and avoid the Mbuna.
You'll see that terms like "aggression" and "mean as anything" are all
relative. After all, I've seen quite a few Central American species that
make even some of the Mbuna seem sweet and innocent.
Tim


  #15  
Old January 9th 05, 11:54 AM
Craig
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lol, too true.

i would love to expand my collection into some of the rift cichlids but
space is very limited at the moment and id rather get a propeer sized,
suitable tank then getting a smaller one which will harm the fish and
need replacing eventually.

Would be pretty cool though, although ideally id like to make an amazon
basin biotope tank, try to mimic thenatural habitat.

Peace out Craig



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  #16  
Old February 21st 11, 06:22 PM
toreskeviin toreskeviin is offline
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They are yellow prohibited at this moment, I believe that as they grow, the colour change. 3 pairs of which the largest cave quarrel, of which seems to be mainly fish in the tank moment. These are cute fish! They all look the same, do not know if male or female.
 




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