Throw all the females in, along with those rainbows, or choose some other west african cichlids. The increased competition may cause the nannochromis to focus their aggression towards the others rather than themselves.
There's about a dozen harlequin rasboras in with the male and when I have tried introducing a female he immediately goes on the hunt for her. i haven't tried both at once, yet. I have the females in a 55g with guppies and plan to move the male over once I replace the 2mm gravel with sand.Throw all the females in, along with those rainbows, or choose some other west african cichlids. The increased competition may cause the nannochromis to focus their aggression towards the others rather than themselves.
Try adding other cichlids that are direct competition with them for territory rather than dithers like rasboras. That should hopefully get them to focus their aggression outward than inward. Also, try both females at onceThere's about a dozen harlequin rasboras in with the male and when I have tried introducing a female he immediately goes on the hunt for her. i haven't tried both at once, yet. I have the females in a 55g with guppies and plan to move the male over once I replace the 2mm gravel with sand.
Just have to catch them out of a heavily planted 55g ?Good luck. Give them some time and he should pick a female he likes.
The 55g has 2 AC50s. This is a 29g in the pics.How much current have you got in the tank? With a 55gal, loads of dithers and competition, and hiding spots created. There should be enough space to house them together.