
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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Males also have markedly elongated pelvic and caudal fins compared to females.
Provide at least one large, flat-topped stone or suitable elevated surface that can serve as a spawning site for the male.
Best kept as one male with several females; never keep more than one male per aquarium, as male–male aggression is severe even in very large tanks.
Tankmates should be peaceful sand-dwelling species such as Xenotilapia, Ectodus, or Enantiopus; aggressive or fin-nipping species are unsuitable.
In aquaria, best fed with Cyclops, Daphnia, Artemia, and other suitable frozen or live foods.
Breeding males defend large territories (5–10 m apart in nature) and construct a spawning site either on top of a large rock or, in some populations, a sand mound resembling a small volcano (30–50 cm diameter).
Spawning does not involve the typical circular movement of mouthbrooders; the female lays single eggs and immediately picks them up by swimming backwards. Clutch size is extremely small, usually 3–5 eggs and rarely more than a dozen.
Females incubate the brood for an exceptionally long time—often around two months and in some cases over 100 days—while continuing to feed during incubation. Fry are released at a relatively large size (around 30–35 mm).
The only species of the genus regularly observed in relatively shallow water during breeding. The prolonged mouthbrooding period and extremely small clutch size are thought to be adaptations to intense predation pressure from deep-water predators such as species of Bathybates.
Distinguished from other Benthochromis species by mouth angle, head proportions, fin morphology, and—most clearly in males—by the presence of three horizontal stripes (two in B. tricoti, none in B. melanoides).
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