
Lake Tanganyika cichlids — species, locations & maps
Lake Tanganyika cichlids — species, locations & maps

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Lake Tanganyika cichlids — species, locations & maps.
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Suitable tankmates are other sufficiently large Tanganyikan cichlids such as Cyprichromis, Neolamprologus, Julidochromis, etc. Avoid keeping them with robust, highly competitive species such as Tropheus or Petrochromis.
Best kept as a single pair, or (in a large enough aquarium) a group of at least 7 individuals. A tight-fitting lid is recommended as they may jump.
The female chooses a tight cave or gap between rocks that only she can enter. She lays roughly 50–200 eggs inside. The male fertilizes them from outside by releasing milt into the cave entrance.
Larvae hatch after about 3 days and become free-swimming after 5–7 days; at that point they can be fed newly-hatched Artemia. The female cares for eggs and fry; the male guards the area near the cave but often disappears before the fry are free-swimming.