Jump to content

smidey

Members
  • Posts

    5949
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by smidey

  1. what size is your tank?

    the yellow is trying to avoid being attacked based on what you've said. the best way of keeping africans is to have many more than you have. At least 6 of each species ideally only one or two males. this spreads the aggression over many more fish. Basically, the dominant male will chase everyone else to become or stay the boss, then he'll harass the females for breeding. It's all about who is the toughest, the toughest eats best and breeds the most. Think of african fish as having ten times the normal animal instint when it comes to dominance and breeding behaviour.

  2. You said they were 1.5cm. Barely more than fry, anything that young tends to be pretty delicate.

    In my experience they aren't delicate at all, at any size and I've breed around 800 tropheus alone over the years.

    Of all the fish I've kept and bred the very few I have lost have been due to aggression or an out of the blue thing like one jumped out of the tank. I put this down to the food I feed, nls and jbl novorift. Other than that, they get put from one tank to another including into other peoples tanks, no acclimatizing or any of that and I've not had an issue. They get six times the tank volume per hour and a weekly 30%wc. Sometimes I leave it for two weeks, they are really easy to keep if fed the right stuff think. I regularly freight fish at 1.5cm the length of the country woo weak they are not.

  3. I'm not saying it's bloat, just wondered if you had any experience with them as you referred to them as delicate. Nothing delicate about them I think, certainly if compared to species of other origins.

    In my experience if the water parameters are some where near what they need to be about the only thing that'll hurt them is the food

  4. it doesn't make sense to me because i also haven't had any fish deaths either and i don't use any meds at all. i have left them for several days and never had an issue. the tank also gets a good clean as the algae grazing nature of the fish clean it up so they aren't actually being starved the entire time. I'm not saying you shouldn't dose, that's your choice but i think it's a waste of time based on my experience.

  5. i have left them for up to 5 days with out feeding when i have had to. no issues at all and it seemed they bred every time i did so, not sure if there was a connection or just coincidence. not sure about the advice regarding dosing the tank, i haven't and wouldn't. it doesn't make sense to me to do so.

  6. i don't think it matters which species go in first. The dems are most likely to be aggro towards their own kind, it's called conspecific aggressive. Them and other africans, like tropheus are extremely conspecific aggressive but aren't as bad toward other species. They will chase other species but don't take it to the level they do with their own kind. The e yellows will stick up for themselves, as long as they are a similar size it'll be fine.

    for example, with my tropheus, a pemba will seek out another pemba that's in a group of 6 duboisi. It looks like they can't even see the other species apart from swimming around it.

  7. there's no reason why you can't keep other species, just have to be smaller ones. adding some peacocks will be ok, even some zebras but the lack of depth is your biggest issue. the length is good, they can create territories away from each other.

    Make it up as you go along, get the yellows and dems and see how it is working out. As time goes on keep an eye out for what fish become available and do research into if they will work and give them a go if you like them. From what i've seen regarding availability of specific species is it can be erratic. You might decide you want a certain species but then none are available for months.

  8. usually they are aggro to their own kind (con specific aggressive) and generally leave other species alone as long as they have their own kind to chase/dominate. they do chase other species but never seem to actually go through with fighting and causing damage.

    Personally, with my experience if i wanted to keep one with those fish i'd give it a go and see how it went. The moorri, like pemba have the down facing mouth and i've noticed they don't do any where near as much damage as duboisi which have the forward facing mouth so when my pemba are fighting limited damage is caused.

  9. I thought they were a bit toey, but nothing that over crowding and over feeding did not fix. IMO they are just like most other mbuna.

    i totally agree with this. big numbers and heaps of food is my advice to anyone that wants to keep africans at their best. as long as you've got plenty of filtration it won't be anything but good for them as long as your feeding NLS, JBL or Sera foods designed for them.

  10. i prefer to keep my africans, tanganyikans specifically now as easy as i can with the least amount of messing around. that keeps conditions stable that the fish will adjust to (minimally) and do well.

    If your on town supply the water will automatically be near what you need as the water supply needs to be acidic so it doesn't destroy the water supply system. In cases where you are on tank water, like me, concrete tanks are good and plastic tanks make it much harder to get the water to desirable conditions.

    I have kept africans for years and always set up like this, they have all done well and bred in massive numbers so i know what i do works. If you choose to add chemicals you risk getting it wrong over time and have the water conditions swing and really hurt the fish.

    Also keep in mind the fish you have or will get are not wild caught fish or any where near it so many generations above them have been kept in fish tanks so wild conditions aren't that important as long as you keep your conditions in a similar nature.

    My tap water is ph of about 7.4. In my tanks i have crushed marble as a substrate along with whole and crushed shells. I keep the temp about 26, filtration of around 6 times the tank volume per hour with 30% water changes each week. feed good quality food and plenty of it and they will do well. stocking is a completely different setup depending on which species you go for but keep them in big numbers, more than you think is too many usually. once you setup is right they will be easy to keep, you'll have very few health issues and you'll enjoy them a lot with little weekly maintenance.

×
×
  • Create New...