
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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Well suited for Tanganyika community aquaria. Aggression toward other species is usually limited to fry defense.
The female lays approximately 75–150 eggs. Fry become free-swimming after about one week and immediately start feeding on plankton. In the wild, both parents guard the fry for roughly 40 days, after which the young are abandoned.
In nature, mixed broods containing fry from other pairs have been documented, possibly due to parents expelling part of their offspring when the territory becomes unsafe. In aquarium, parents often tolerate older generations and may form loose colonies.
The most reliable visual distinction is the caudal fin: N. leloupi always shows a black marginal edge, often with a white submarginal band, whereas N. caudopunctatus lacks this black edging.
This species is sometimes incorrectly regarded as a typical shell-dweller; in reality, snail shells are uncommon in its natural habitat and breeding normally takes place in caves.
Diagnostic characters include a small size, sand-beige base coloration without melanin pattern on the body, blue eyes, a pointed triangular snout, and a strongly triangular caudal fin without filamentous extensions.
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