Aphyosemion Gardneri

KingofthePisces

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just looking for advice on breeding this type of killifish because im rather bored with my blue panchax killifish all he does is sit at the surface and take potshots at the babys in the breeder net so ive changed my mind to Aphyosemion gardneri any advice on keeping them?
 
Hi,
I wrote this article quite some time ago in response to another members question, I have re-pasted it for you, although not in direct response to your question, all the informaton contained should be relevant.


I would start with the species of Fundulopanchax gardneri. try to get hold of true strains. ie. Fundulopanchax gardneri nigerianus "Jos Plateau" or any of the others available. Aplochelius lineatus "Gold" whilst being a nice beginners fish and easy to keep and breed they attain a size of 4" (100mm) given the proper conditions and I personally would not a small tank for these.
Below is a concise account of how to keep and breed Fp. gardneri, it was written in response to another members plight but I think it could also be revelent to you. forget the top line as he was interested in the gold colour morph....but they all have similar requirements. I hope this is of some use to you..

Fundulopanchax (as they are now known) gardneri nigerianus Gold. are a colour morph of Fp.gardneri. There are many different strains from different geographical locations mostly inside Nigeria in West Africa.
I have bred many different strains in the past noteably P82, Jos Plateau, Port Harcourt, Makurdi and Misaje, the latter being my favourite.
The all have similar breeding habits and below follows a concise husbandry for that particular species the way I breed them.
Tank:- 18"x10"x10" bare bottomed tank with a tight fitting lid (essential, for obvious reasons) This size of tank will suffice for an adult trio. Into this tank I place a small air driven polyfilter with the flow set to a trickle along the water surface. A small heater is also added and set to a temperature of 76'F. The pH of the water should be in or around 6.8. I perform 30% waterchanges weekly. (syphoning debris from the bare bottom).
Adult Feeding:-The adult Fp. gardneri are not fussy about what they eat (they will eat your molly fry) I mostly feed livefood ranging from brineshrimp, tubifex worms, grindalworms, whiteworms, daphnia, bloodworm and vestigal winged fruitfly. but they will redily accept flake and frozen foodstuffs as well. Fundulopanchax gardneri will attain a length of around 65-70mm under aquarium conditions following all the above criteria.
Breeding:-Everything that has already been mentioned above will ensure good conditioned stock ready for breeding. As Fp. gardneri are predominatly top spawners then the only thing that is left to do is to add around 5-6 synthetic yarn spawning mops.
http://www.djramsey.com/tropfish/spawning_mops.htm
Over the course of the comming days the male will court the females and lure them one at a time into and alongside the mops, The pair will move along side each other and the male will wrap his dorsal fin over the female, they wiill adopt what is commonly known as an "S" position as they move eratically near the spawning site, a quick "jerk" movement completes the spawning cycle and one egg is laid at a time in the mop. This is a constant cycle, the mops also provide resting places for the females away from over avid males. As regard to egg numbers, you should expect to collect between 6-30 eggs on a daily basis.
Fry Rearing:- I collect the eggs daily, removing them from the mop with my fingers, being careful not to squeeze too hard. Remove the mops one at a time from the parent tank and gently squeeze all the access water from them, now inspect them for eggs. Fp gardneri eggs are quite large as killifish species go the egg measuring roughly 1/8", they are easily seen with the naked eye and are opaque to yellowish in colour. Place all collected eggs in a small clean margarine tub floated in the parent tank with roughly 40mm of water and a small airline set to a very slow trickle. Inspect the eggs daily and remove all fungussed and infertile ones. (some breeders like to use chemicals as an anti fungus agent, I don't like using these) I replace the marg tub water every other day using the water from the parent tank.
The eggs will go through many stages of embronic growth eventually hatching after 14-21 days. The fry ar quite large and will take newly hatched brineshrimp (essential) microworms and crushed flake from the outset. Provide the fry with their own growing on tank of similar dimensions and setup as per the adults above. Start with a water depth of around 2" and gradulally increase this as the fry grow, remember cleanliness is a key part in rearing any fry. (You will not rear every single fry nor will it be necessary to do so) I rear around 20 pair at a time. You will notice some skews in sex ratios ie: mostly all males or all females. This can be experamented with as it is linked to the temperature of the egg incubation. Keep fish of comparable size in the same tank as the larger ones will kill of the smaller siblings.Keep the most robust stock for future breeding and sell your surplus, you can expect to get at least £5 per pair. Bring in new stock on a regular basis from the same location or colour morph. (do not cross strains) to keep the strain strong and to eleviate any diformaties caused by in-breeding. Lastly cull weak stock. (they will only be preyed upon anyway).
Summary:- Fundulopanchax gardneri nigerianus is a beautiful killifish species, they are quite easy to breed and maintain. Fry rearing present little or no problems, they are an excellent introduction into the world of Killifish for the novice. After 25 years of breeding Killi's I always have room in my fish room for one or two varieties of Fp. gardneri.
I sincerly hope this was of some help to you and to others wishing to breed this beautiful species of Killifish.
Regards
BigC
 
as soon as my baby guppies are at sale size is when im getting new fish so ill ask the pet shop a few weeks in advance and just one question whts the different colour varietys im intrested
 
They are location codes i.e. Jos Plateau which indicates the area in Nigeria and slightly further afield were they were found. Nowdays it's much more technical as the collectors use GPS (satnav) to pinpoint precise collection points.
They vary in colouration (even colour forms from the same location i.e. blue phenotypes and yellow phenotypes)
My particular favourites/locations are mentioned in the above text, they are nicely marked fish with many spots and good all round balanced colouration in the fins.
Regards
BigC
 
can they be kept with any other types of killifish or is that a bad idea?
im going to get this colour variation:
Fp_gardneri_nigerianus_64EW6518.jpg

i like blue fish placed an order for some today they will be here on thursday next week
 
Yes thats Fundulopanchax gardneri nigerianus. (....) but there is a bit missing (the location code) from the end. Ask your dealer for this if he is getting them in from a local breeder or import.
 
I cant access their site to see what they have, need retail account ID and password
but do ask the retailer to get the information for you
Regards
BigC
 
I cant access their site to see what they have, need retail account ID and password
but do ask the retailer to get the information for you
Regards
BigC
try www.bayfish.com.au they show the fish they sell my petstore might be getting them from there you dont need a user account only for the prices but its usually just a picture of the fish and its name and discription of how it goes in the aquarium
 
Yeah had a look there king,
Remember to ask for the location, that pic looks like a blue form possibly "Udi Mountain"
Which would be Fundulopanchax gardneri gardneri Udi Mountain
if you like this type of colouration then fine go with it
IMO
I much prefer the nigerianus types
which would be
Fundulopanchax gardneri nigerianus (location code
if you see what I mean, much more colouration with yellow fin edging etc.
google gardneri gardneri pics and then gardneri nigerianus pics and judge for yourself.
Regards
BigC
 
Yeah had a look there king,
Remember to ask for the location, that pic looks like a blue form possibly "Udi Mountain"
Which would be Fundulopanchax gardneri gardneri Udi Mountain
if you like this type of colouration then fine go with it
IMO
I much prefer the nigerianus types
which would be
Fundulopanchax gardneri nigerianus (location code
if you see what I mean, much more colouration with yellow fin edging etc.
google gardneri gardneri pics and then gardneri nigerianus pics and judge for yourself.
Regards
BigC
im a bit confused do i say it as Aphyosemion or Fundulopanchax gardneri or are they the same thing?? the petstore ordered them yesterday he said they get them in as a mixture of breeding trio's like gardneri morph and nigerianus morph with some others that he didnt mention them he said somthing about one called Fundulopanchax gardneri Makurdi he seemed excited for some reason about it

Thanks
King of the Pisces
 
They are now classified as Fundulopanchax, they were formerly classed as Aphyosemion. Some old skool fanciers will still refer to them as Aphyosemion. As long as you have the rest of the name then everybody should know what you mean. But todays proper name is Fundulopanchax.

Fundulopanchax gardneri Makurdi is Fundulopanchax gardneri nigerianus "Makurdi"
excellent. IMO one of the nicer looking locations.
Makurdi is a region within Nigeria.
Get those if you can.
Regards
BigC
 
thanks ill try to get the fundulopanchax gardneri nigerianus Makurdi just a few more questions what do i feed the fry? will they eat crushed flake? can i keep the babys in a breeding net or will it become too crowded? how do you tell male from female?
KingofthePisces
 
First fry foods can consist of Newly Hatched Brineshrimp. Microworm and finely crushed Flake.
Just buy a plastic cake box (tupperware) and place a heater in it, water from the parent tank. Lift the spawning mop from the parent tank and place in the fry setup. Place a brand new mop in with the parents. This cuts down handling the eggs. Males fins will start to show signs of colouring up (sexing out) in about 6-8 weeks from hatching.
Remember cleanliness in the fry tank coupled with regular waterchanges are very important.
Regards
BigC
 

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