And now, I get busy.
The 3 week old Parananochromis brevirostris are growing very fast. Meanwhile, the Chromidotilapia nana males have commenced hostilities, in the 3 tanks I've spread them out in. This morning, I separated two pairs into their own tanks, which should give me 5 pairs in 5 tanks, with a few probably female stragglers in the largest, a 75 gallon.
The Parananochromis will need the same treatment soon. Dwarf Cichlids are resource eaters. I'm probably the only person in North America with these species, so I want to breed them so they can be available both for research and for the enjoyment of other fishkeepers. Before I can distribute any, I need to get to F-2 - a second captive generation.
If you hopped off a cruise ship or drove by to visit the fishroom, you'd consider it fairly empty. A lot of tanks are waiting. If you want to breed species like these, you need space to raise them in. My C nana are now 9 months old, and there has been no breeding behaviour. It's just starting.
My Enigmatochromis lucanusii spawned, but the spawn failed. Then they got into a fight, and before I could react, the female was mortally wounded. Thus ends a project.
I currently have bought or traded eggs hatched from Diapteron georgiae, Aphyosemion striatum, Chromaphyosemion aurianticum, and Aphyosemion zygaima from the 2021 collection. I have also hatched my A escherichi, Platopochilus sp, Epiplatys huberi, and the 1989 zygaima collection growing. None of these are in numbers I'd sell. No one wants them but me. So I breed a few, keep them in species tanks and in a while, breed a few more. That's worked for 33 years with the 1989 zygaima group.
I also realized I had a brood of Ancistrus gold in one of my communities, and I took pity on them. They would have been eaten. Those will go to a pet store when they're big enough. I thought I was rid of them, but a few fry were missed 2 generations ago. I don't like linebred fish, but these guys have earned a spot. I thought I had sold them all a couple of times, but they hang in.
I really like my jae barbs - Enteromius jae. This week, I am going to try to breed them in a breeding tank, for the first time. I kept them for years in a single species tank where they regularly produced fry, just like that, until they died out. These ones we caught last summer, and I see no fry. It's time to try to fix that.