
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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Females are silvery-grey and lack horizontal stripes.
Breeding males are mauve-grey to bluish with two bright electric-blue horizontal stripes (lacking the lower stripe that crosses the pectoral fin in B. horii), a yellow throat, and long filamentous extensions of the caudal and pelvic fins. Non-breeding males may lose most coloration and appear silvery.
Fine sand substrate; spawning sites may consist of flat stones, vertical rock faces, or shallow sand depressions.
Extremely sensitive to disturbance and prone to panic reactions; calm surroundings and very peaceful tankmates are essential.
In aquaria, accepts a wide range of foods including planktonic frozen foods, small invertebrates, and other suitable animal-based diets.
Males defend territories and display intensely over rock surfaces or sand depressions. Clutch size is very small (typically 5–15 eggs), with tiny eggs (~2 mm).
Females brood for an extended period, often exceeding two months, and release only a few relatively large fry.
True B. tricoti appears to be a deep-water species rarely encountered alive, which explains its scarcity in aquaria and the long-standing taxonomic confusion within the genus.
Males are best distinguished from congeners by having exactly two horizontal blue stripes, while B. horii has three and B. melanoides has none.
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