I found rainbow eggs fungused on touch. Plus there were hundreds of them, compared to the slow steady production of Aphyosemion eggs. I could handle blue eye eggs, but rainbow eggs? I just move the mop.
The big issue for me with killies is gender. There seems to be a complex interplay between a set of triggers - water hardness, temperature, etc in trying to get both sexes from the fry. It is environmentally determined. The hobby, as usual, wants one factor to determine, but it doesn't work that way.
In my new(ish) fishroom, I have lost a few species to an inability to get both sexes. In each house, it's been different. going back 35 years.
I'm working on it, to sort out what this is. With some species (A. zygaima) I was able to manipulate ratios to get females (I started with 37 males to every female, consistently) by manipulating water hardness. With other species, the trick seemed temperature related. There are so many possible variables.
In this room with softer tap, I get 2 zygaima females for every male, which is good. It happens across all seasons, so temperature doesn't seem to do it.
I'm in danger of losing my Aphyosemion escherichi that I caught in Gabon because I am getting all females (no young males). I have about 40 juveniles, with no signs of any boys. I just have to keep picking eggs and trying things. I recently lost my striatum and ogoense to all female ratios.