Hello guest! Are you an Apistogramma enthusiast? If so we invite you to join our community and see what it has to offer. Our site is specifically designed for you and it's a great place for Apisto enthusiasts to meet online. Once you join you'll be able to post messages, upload pictures of your fish and tanks and have a great time with other Apisto enthusiasts. Sign up today!
You could do a pair of another species with different finnage, like A. agassizii or A. diplotaenia. A. agassizii may be mean to each other if you just get a pair but your tank looks like it has enough hiding places that it might not be an issue.
It appears to me that it is indeed what CRD suggested. Also, as Mike and Mac both stated, the distribution is more than likely wider than just Rio Tigre and it's tributaries. See this blog post (I translated from Chinese to Enlish in Google Chrome, YMMV).
I'm wondering if what this article from The Smithsonian is talking about occurs in South America with the native fish population. Does this phenomena occur with any waterfowl populations in SA? How exactly would it affect distribution of fish in SA if it did?
I can appreciate what you both mean about the distribution being larger than what is officially documented. I only mentioned the type locality because it was specifically stated as the location where the particular specimens in the photographs were collected. I thought it might be helpful to...
It could be, but Peru isn't listed as the distribution locale for that species anywhere, and this particular fish is from a smaller creek tributary of the Rio Tigre somewhere downstream of Intuto, between Intuto and Nauta in Peru.
I've been doing some research trying to find a Genus sp. name for a tetra that appears in TomC's "Collecting in Río Tigre / Río Pucacuro 2010" collection trip notes and gallery. Specifically the one found the last day with A. pantalone and A. martini in the trip notes, shown here in the...
Is the A. sp. 'Matses' from the 2011 report part of the Nijsseni lineage? The coloring is very similar to A. nijsseni and A. panduro, and the longer trailing ventrals, especially on the females, are reminiscent of my A. rositae. Seems like most of those species are all from the same general...
I tried your suggestions and actually had a fair number of BBS hatch out the most recent instance. Still very poor hatch rate, I'd say somewhere around 25-30% but no more than that. I also changed my light source out, as the water had been very warm, perhaps too warm (felt much higher than 86F)...
Interesting Darrel, nice thread you linked. Having read through it, makes me wonder if one or two would do alright as long as my pH doesn't live south of around 5.5, and I can provide enough Ca++ for the snails' shell production.
How exactly does this phenomena differ in an acidic tank...
I'll try out some of your suggestions with the new batch I have coming.
I'll have to recheck my municipal water website to see if it states specifically whether they use chlorine or chloramines. I believe SeaChem Prime neutralizes both, correct?
I hadn't been, but the last time I did just to rule it out. It didn't affect a change in my results. The different methods I'd read through previously said dechlorinating was unnecessary due to offgassing.
What hydrometer do you use? One of those slender glass hydrometer/thermometer combos? My...
Wild female from the first purchase, and the larger of the two males from the second purchase (which I suspect is perhaps a wild male left over from before judging by it's size) so either F1 or blended generation.
There's a lot of stuff in the tank so hiding isn't hard. Today however I removed the 3 diamond tetras, as they were keenly interested in my female's apisto hut, and she had resorted to staying inside instead of chasing them away. The male seemed disinterested in the tetras, as well as the female...