🌟 Exclusive Amazon Black Friday Deals 2024 🌟

Don’t miss out on the best deals of the season! Shop now 🎁

Convict Cichlids

Jessie J.

Fish Crazy
Joined
Nov 11, 2018
Messages
279
Reaction score
26
Location
North Carolina, US
Hi everyone! Sorry if this is in the wrong section. Anyway, I want to get some convicts and I don't know how to care for them or what other fish I can keep them with.
  1. What do I feed them? Do they need a special food or can I just feed them tropical flakes and bloodworms?
  2. Can I keep them with BN plecos?
  3. What temperature must they be kept at?
  4. How big do they get?
Thank you!
 
Convict cichlids are easy to keep and will eat any sort of fish food. They will live in most water with a GH between 0ppm up to 300+ppm, and a pH between 6.0 - 8.5. Temperature between 20-30C.

Most of them grow to about 4 inches (not including tail) but some do get bigger and I have seen them 6 inches long.

Males have long pointed dorsal (top) and anal (bottom) fins and females have shorter more rounded dorsal & anal fins. Mature females get an orange patch on their side. If you have a pr they will breed and you will have hundreds of baby fish to get rid of. Unfortunately they are not big sellers and most shops won't take them. So when they do breed, you keep 10-20 nice young fish and kill the rest. Then you only have 10-20 fish to get rid of.

They will get along with bristlenose catfish but when the convicts start breeding, they might knock the catfish around if there isn't enough hiding places or the tank is too small.

There are 2 other Cichlids that resemble convicts and aren't as aggressive, and they sell more readily. Cichlasoma sajica and Cichlasoma spilurum are both nice fish and require similar conditions to the convicts.

I you want fish to keep with the catfish, Apistogrammas might be an option but you need to keep the water clean and bristlenose are filthy fish. So if you have Apistogrammas with bristlenose, you would need to do a big water change and complete gravel clean 2 or more times per week. However, before you get Apistogrammas, you should check the GH of your water, as they prefer soft neutral to slightly acid water (GH less than 200ppm and pH below 7.2).
 
I will copy a profile of this species I wrote elsewhere that should answer your questions.

Amatitlania nigrofasciata

Family: Cichlidae, Subfamily Cichlinae

Origin and Habitat: Widely distributed in Central America: Pacific slope from Guatemala to El Salvador, Atlantic slope from Guatemala to Honduras. Not native to Panama, Costa Rica or Nicaragua (as previously thought, but see additional species comments under Description). Introduced elsewhere, including the USA and Australia. Occurs in flowing water streams and rivers, also in lakes and ponds, preferring a rocky habitat with wood and debris; never in open water.

Compatibility/Temperament: This is not a community fish. Best in a species tank; a pair may be kept in a 36-inch (40+ gallon) tank. In much larger tanks (over 6 feet) it may be kept with a few other Central American cichlids that are robust. This species is very aggressive and territorial, and when spawning becomes very violent to all other fish including much larger cichlids.

Diet: Convict cichlids are omnivorous feeding naturally on worms, crustaceans, insects, fish and plant matter. They are not fussy eaters and will accept any food, but a variety will ensure better health.

Size: Males attain 10cm/4 inches though some sources report 15cm/6 inches; females slightly smaller.

Minimum Tank Suggestion: 36-inch (40 gallon) for a pair alone.

Water parameters: Medium hard to hard (9-20 dGH), basic (pH 7-8), temperature 20-36C/68-100F. This is the "tolerated" temperature range [Fishbase] but the fish will be better within a more normal range with a maximum of 26C/79F.

Discussion


Convict cichlids, also sometimes seen under the common name of Zebra Cichlid, are widely available; they are very hardy, very easy to spawn, and are thus frequently sold as good beginner fish. This is unfortunate, since this fish is not a community fish; and being easy to spawn and prolific, the fry are not easy to get rid of.
It is best in a species tank with a pair. Pea gravel substrate, several rocks, and chunks of bogwood will replicate its natural habitat. Rock must be secure, as this fish will dig and dislodge everything. Substrate-rooted plants are not possible, but Java Fern and Anubias secured to rock and wood are useful. Floating plants are advisable, as this fish naturally never ventures into open water but remains under cover.

Sexual dimorphism is very easy. Males are the larger and have a more pointed tip on their dorsal fin. Females, on the other hand, are smaller with an orange patch on their bellies.

In recent years, a convict with red on the fins has become popular. This may be a distinct species [see below] but this is uncertain, and now hybrids are also available, so the species may not be true. It is generally referred to by the common name "Honduran Red Points" or HRP Convict.

The species was originally described by A. Gunther in 1867 as Heros nigrofasciatus. The species epithet is Latin, meaning black banded. In 1980 it was transferred into the genus Cichlasoma and the species epithet was changed to nigrofasciatum to agree with the gender of the genus name. It was moved into the genus Archocentrus (as A. nigrofasciatus) by Kullander & Hartel (1997). R. Allgayer (2001) moved it into Cryptoheros, but it wasn't there long.

In his revision of the genus Archocentrus, Juan Schmitter-Soto (2007) identified four distinct "convict" species and placed them in his newly-erected genus Amatitlania. The genus was named for the type locality of the type species; 'Amatitlan' means 'a place abundant in amate' in Nahuatl, 'amate' is a kind of rustic paper made from the bark of Ficus petiolaris or Ficus indica [source: Fishbase]. A. nigrofasciatus, the type (and original) species, occurs throughout the given habitat range, while A. siquia occurs on the Atlantic slope of honduras and Costa Rica, A. coatepeque is endemic to Lake Coatepeque in El Salvador, and A. kanna occurs on the Atlantic slope in Panama. This classification is accepted as valid, except that A. coatepeque was subsequently determined to be conspecific with A. nigrofasciatus by McMahan, et al. (2014).

References:

Fisbase: Amatitlania nigrofasciata, Convict cichlid : aquarium

Kullander, S.O. and K.E. Hartel (1997), "The systematic status of cichlid genera described by Louis Agassiz in 1859: Amphilophus, Baiodon, Hypsophrys and Parachromis (Teleostei: Cichlidae)," Ichthyological Exploration of Freshwaters, volume 7 (no. 3), pp. 193-202.

McMahan, C.D., W.A. Matamoros, E. Barraza, J. Kutz and P. Chakrabarty (2014), “Taxonomic status of the Lago Coatepeque endemic convict cichlid Amatitlania coatepeque (Teleostei: Cichlidae),” Copeia 2014 (no. 4), pp. 633-638.

Schmitter-Soto, J.J. (2007), "A systematic revision of the genus Archocentrus (Perciformes: Cichlidae), with the description of two new genera and six new species," Zootaxa No. 1603, pp. 1-76.

EDIT. Colin posted while I was typing.
 
My newest tank is cycling, and I just finished adding the substrate (stupid me thought it was going to be a bare-bottom tank but I later decided to use sand substrate) and a some cool rocks for caves.
 
So after seeing this video and some others with different fish, I was thinking about parrot cichlids. And so I was wondering if they would get along with convict cichlids, as I have seen them in the same tanks before without any signs of fin picking or scale damage. Here are some more questions I have:

  1. Can I keep them with parrot cichlids?
  2. Are jellybean or neon parrot cichlids injected with dye? I was erring to the side of colorful parrots for my tank but I don't want to buy any with a death sentence. If so I may get blood parrot cichlids.
  3. Will they do well in assorted 30-gallon tanks with the convict cichlids? Just for the winter/cool spring months because once the weather warms they can stay in a protected 50-80 gallon pond outside.
This is a link to the video I was watching; they look so cute and I don't think convict cichlids would be so trainable. I love sticking my hand in tanks of water and having the fish swim over my hand.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=148&v=I0INzbh587o

Ever been to AquariumOutfitters in Wake forest? Check out Walter the 2-foot long freshwater therapy fish. :)
 
Convict cichlids are not community fish, I already dealt with that. Videos on YouTube or wherever are never reliable unless one knows the source; any one can post a video, and things may "seem" OK during the video, but be anything but. Unfortunately, many fishkeepers do not really care about the fish.

To the Blood Parrot cichlids. This is a man-made artificial "species," and there is still uncertainty over the likely natural species used to create this fish. The deformities in the fish, including the spine, are considered unethical by many aquarists, and the only way to stop this cruelty is to not buy the fish. But going on, the deformities make this fish unable to defend itself, and it can easily be outcompeted for food, so it is not a community fish. It often has difficulty eating regardless. It would never survive in the wild. It gets large, 8-10 inches, and a 50g tank for one is minimum.
 
Jessie,

Lots of good data here and lots of good advice. My son keeps Convicts and I will tell you like others have, they are NOT community fish. They will wipe out everything in the tank except say some corys or a pleco. THat being said, in and of themselves they are really fun and very personable. My sons convicts will actually follow him around and they school. A very personable fish to keep.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top