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#1 |
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Senior Member
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Here's a topic for all y'all serious Malawi cichlid breeders...
Today, I was lucky enough to actually get to watch my cichlids spawning! Here's the question: Is it normal for a female to spawn with two males? I have never heard of this behavior, has it ever been documented by anyone else? Why would she be doing this? |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 280
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I would assume she'd be doing this because she feels that both those males have good genes. That's the problem with aquariums sometimes, you get unintentional crosses.....
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#3 |
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Super moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 2,100
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None of my malawi females do this, but one of my males sometimes shares two females.
One of my female oscars shares my 2 male oscars though, one male digs a nest one end of the tank and the other the other end. She then drifts between two nests depending on which oscar is more ready to display the cortship ritual. I've had spawnings before but if it wasn't for my nocternal catfish that I don't know how many I have because they all hide during the day behind masses of bog wood which they breed in, then i'd have loads of oscars.
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If you have a big enough tank with enough hiding places, pH of around 7, you can keep virtually any fish together as long as all the fish are around the same size and these two groups of fish are avioded: Serrasalmus Tetradon(figure eights and dwarfs are the exception). I keep a successful community of fish in a 4 foot tank including the following families: Cichlids, tetras, loaches, gouramis, barbs, rainbows, livebearers, killiefish, catfish, puffers. |
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#4 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 280
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Alot of Malawian males don't care about the species of female they spawn with. I've had to get rid of a few species of fish as the males I had, would interfere in the spawning of all the species in the tank and try to spawn with that female. They were also very aggressive. Since I did not want crosses in my tanks, the hyperdominant males had to go.
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#5 |
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Super moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 2,100
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Actually for the genes of the cichlid to be improved, it's best to breed the hyperdominant ones because their genes are more valuable in the gene pool and for the strain to improve, mating cichlids with dominant males and females is a must. That's how natuaral selection works in the wild.
__________________
If you have a big enough tank with enough hiding places, pH of around 7, you can keep virtually any fish together as long as all the fish are around the same size and these two groups of fish are avioded: Serrasalmus Tetradon(figure eights and dwarfs are the exception). I keep a successful community of fish in a 4 foot tank including the following families: Cichlids, tetras, loaches, gouramis, barbs, rainbows, livebearers, killiefish, catfish, puffers. |
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