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

tanganyika.si
Lake Tanganyika cichlids — species, locations & maps.
All images are used with permission of the authors. Unauthorized use is prohibited.
Quick links
Because of strong intraspecific aggression, never keep more than one male. Best practice is one male with one female, or one male with two females. A common approach is to start with 5–7 juveniles and allow a pair to form (around 8 months), then remove the others.
A formed pair may be kept in an aquarium around 120 × 40 cm (approximately 200 L), but if the pair bond breaks, a male may quickly kill the female even in such a tank, so a larger aquarium is recommended. For a community setup, at least 300 L is advised, or preferably a tank length of at least 150 cm. Suitable tankmates are other robust Tanganyika cichlids such as species from Neolamprologus, Altolamprologus, and Cyprichromis; avoid similarly shaped or ecologically similar species such as N. leleupi, N. longior, Julidochromis, and comparable fishes.
Polychromatism is described as absent; most geographic variants are broadly similar, with one noted exception: a population from Izinga Island described as Neolamprologus cylindricus ‘Green’, reported to have four bars beneath the dorsal fin, whereas other variants have five. A trade form sometimes called “Golden cylindricus” is described by Ad Konings as most likely a hybrid between N. longior and N. cylindricus.
Photo gallery