WhistlingBadger
Professional Cat Herder
Retired Moderator ⚒️
Tank of the Month 🏆
Fish of the Month 🌟
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2011
- Messages
- 7,014
- Reaction score
- 13,033
- Location
- Where the deer and the antelope play
I've loved the looks of M. ctenopoma since I saw them in the Aquarium Atlas. Never tried them though. A West African semi-biotope is on the "someday" list.Three healthy ones, 2 wild and one F-1. But they are really hard to trigger again.
There's a nice story with the congicum. When I was getting ready to move here, I lost a male out of my pair. He jumped in the mess that was the fishroom being disassembled, and I couldn't get to him. The female lived on her own for 2 years. Then I was able to get 7 of them from a shipment, and she is now queen of the herd. You should have seen her when she spotted the newly released congicum swimming her way. She danced.
There are two big males, a smaller one and the rest are females, all in a 4 foot tank with no other species. They don't like other fish, but I thought those big boys would fight. They don't. They have their own territories.
M nanum isn't only smaller (half the size), but they have some reddish brown in them, which reminds me of my other Microctenopoma, ansorgii.
This group is cool. Ctenopoma are bigger predators, and we see them sometimes too. I don't have space for fish like that. But these Micro ones, at 8 or 9 cm, are interesting. Not community minded, but interesting.