@@petersteinmeijer519 that's nuts, man there's so many names and "scientist" change it to another. Makes you wonder if you're ordering the right fish lol
Thank you for sharing this. I am just starting with the Seven-Stripe Cichlids (CARES). I would like to make it as close as possible to their natural settings, as possible. Beautiful.
Tropheus are one of the few species I've never had a go at before... How did it all work out since this video was made, did it go better than expected or not as hoped?!
Stunning set up, but I'm guessing you already know that! the rock work is some of the best I've ever seen in a mbuna tank, I'm going to be on the look out for similar rocks now!
@@AJKAquaria mine still have no Bred yet and I have two pairs ( 1 male has 2 females). I feed them black worms. Sometimes I wonder if they have fry not surviving and I’m unaware
@@degaresaquatics If you're confident you have females, just be patient. Let them settle. I remember moving mine around, and when I did, it would be quite some time before they'd start breeding again.
I have a beautiful male maculipinnis. I am sorry I hadn't bought him together with a female. I tried to add a female later on, but she got killed very quickly. But maybe it was a male... I am not 100 % sure, it was an adolescent. That was a catastrophe.
I have been successfully keeping one for a year. In a 10-gallon tank. No heater. Usually the temperature stays around 23-24 degrees. In September and May drops to 22. In June-July can rise to 28.
The water is jiggling. Do you have a filter running". Why put wire outside wall instead of on top? Thx. It looks pretty good. Now I want one I have only one turtle a red eat slider. Was in a tank indoors and recently put her in back yard and rotate kiddie pools for now. I take her for walks on the grass daily. Need an enclosure.
Not sure if you're still trying to breed these, but they are about next to impossible to find. The mosobo are easy, but the membe deep are very rare. Shame I couldn't keep the group of these that I had. Trying to find them again.
Hi mate what's the difference between the lupingu and Tanzania. I'm trying to get hold of a male lupingu and my local fish shop said that the Tanzania don't go blotchy like the lupingu and some people saying there the same fish and some are saying there not they said the Tanzania stay blue with stripes like when they younger.