Well the flowerhorn is the one in my avatar. As for the red devil, it is at my brothers house until I can get my bigger tank set up. I believe it is female. I am not positive though.Post some pics of your project fish, if your FH is pearly you should get some to fade with some pearls.
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I was thinking of trying to do midas, I like the look of the midas more. I also was reading that the fry would most likely get the body shape of the red devil, which I am not too hot on. So I might try midas if I can find one.Breeding with red devil will give the fry a long snout which doesnt look great.
You can try a midas
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The reason for the responses you were given to your question is that the Amphilophus family of cichlids (this includes both midas and red devils among a few others) is where the fader genes come from in faded flowerhorns rather it is directly or through another hybrid carrying their genes like a blood parrot. Also while some get their fish to pair up nicely with no problems we are talking about some of the most aggressive cichlids in the hobby and it is not uncommon for either sex to kill the other. This can happen when first introduced, during a spawning, during egg care, after eggs hatch or after the fry become free swimming. It can even happen with a pair that has bred and raised fry several times just fine then BAM!! a dead fish. If you are attached to either of the fish you want to breed do as much research as possible about how to minimize the risk and watch them carefully at all stages during breeding them. They really are not a beginner fish to try and breed and the fry can be just as tenacious with each other as the adults.I was thinking of trying to do midas, I like the look of the midas more. I also was reading that the fry would most likely get the body shape of the red devil, which I am not too hot on. So I might try midas if I can find one.
Or I might just find a pretty female flowerhorn and breed them.
I know the the fader gene can come from the Amphilophus Labiatus or the Citrinellus, but I was just wondering as o the fry being fader. Say, how many would become fader, how many may possibly not fade... I am not planning on breeding the two anytime soon (that is if my midevil is female), I was just wanting some information on them is all. I am by no means a fish breeder. I am a noob at breeding any type of fish; I am just interested in getting into it and trying to learn as much as possible before I start messing around with it.The reason for the responses you were given to your question is that the Amphilophus family of cichlids (this includes both midas and red devils among a few others) is where the fader genes come from in faded flowerhorns rather it is directly or through another hybrid carrying their genes like a blood parrot. Also while some get their fish to pair up nicely with no problems we are talking about some of the most aggressive cichlids in the hobby and it is not uncommon for either sex to kill the other. This can happen when first introduced, during a spawning, during egg care, after eggs hatch or after the fry become free swimming. It can even happen with a pair that has bred and raised fry several times just fine then BAM!! a dead fish. If you are attached to either of the fish you want to breed do as much research as possible about how to minimize the risk and watch them carefully at all stages during breeding them. They really are not a beginner fish to try and breed and the fry can be just as tenacious with each other as the adults.
+1 I bred a male dovii and a female texas and after three successful spawns he wanted to spawn she didnt and he had bitten her belly so much that he pilled the scales off and she cowd down and hid in a cave where she died I thought she gave in and layed cause she refused food while in the cave and she was a female that was completely dedicated to her nest and wouldn't eat with it and as for the fry a current batch of ts x rd im raising are mean enough to take eachother out and then one that loses that dies the others will fight over the carcass so if this happens when im away the remnants of a loser are gone by time I get back the fry started being this aggressive before a inch long so when your successful keep a eye out early for fry that show potential and separate themThe reason for the responses you were given to your question is that the Amphilophus family of cichlids (this includes both midas and red devils among a few others) is where the fader genes come from in faded flowerhorns rather it is directly or through another hybrid carrying their genes like a blood parrot. Also while some get their fish to pair up nicely with no problems we are talking about some of the most aggressive cichlids in the hobby and it is not uncommon for either sex to kill the other. This can happen when first introduced, during a spawning, during egg care, after eggs hatch or after the fry become free swimming. It can even happen with a pair that has bred and raised fry several times just fine then BAM!! a dead fish. If you are attached to either of the fish you want to breed do as much research as possible about how to minimize the risk and watch them carefully at all stages during breeding them. They really are not a beginner fish to try and breed and the fry can be just as tenacious with each other as the adults.
Do you have any pictures of the parents / fry by chance, if you do not mind sharing.+1 I bred a male dovii and a female texas and after three successful spawns he wanted to spawn she didnt and he had bitten her belly so much that he pilled the scales off and she cowd down and hid in a cave where she died I thought she gave in and layed cause she refused food while in the cave and she was a female that was completely dedicated to her nest and wouldn't eat with it and as for the fry a current batch of ts x rd im raising are mean enough to take eachother out and then one that loses that dies the others will fight over the carcass so if this happens when im away the remnants of a loser are gone by time I get back the fry started being this aggressive before a inch long so when your successful keep a eye out early for fry that show potential and separate them
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There is no way anyone could answer all of this as to how many would or would not fade/peel. Main reasons are you have not even put up pictures of the potential parents and even then we do not know the genetics behind the parents just what you can visually see. This and the fact it can very from brood to brood. I have broods hatch in the 1000-1500 range in some of my pairs and over the first two weeks have them drop off to around 200 which is still a good many to raise up. I used to try and raise every single one I could up when i first started but soon learned just how unrealistic that is as a small time fish keeper. So now by the time they are around 3/4 an inch i pick out around 24-36 to raise up and feed the rest off to other fish or my turtles. This means that i probably feed off many that would have faded and may have been real stunners but i feel i am giving my fish the best chances by thinning them down to a number that i can house healthily.I know the the fader gene can come from the Amphilophus Labiatus or the Citrinellus, but I was just wondering as o the fry being fader. Say, how many would become fader, how many may possibly not fade... I am not planning on breeding the two anytime soon (that is if my midevil is female), I was just wanting some information on them is all. I am by no means a fish breeder. I am a noob at breeding any type of fish; I am just interested in getting into it and trying to learn as much as possible before I start messing around with it.