Laetacara Dorsigera, Question

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Aquanero

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I've been looking at these on TUIC and was woundering if anybody has kept them and if so what can you tell me about your experiance with them. I've researched them on Fishbase and the Cichlid Room Companion but would like to get some first hand info.
 
Hey Tom! I keep a pair. They are awesome fish, very colorful and active. Pretty confident IMO as well. I keep them in a 125g with a Dicrossus maculatus pair. They eat any pellet I feed and are getting fatter by the day. ryansmith83 keeps them as well, you might drop him a PM. Mine are too small to spawn but have already started showing signs of courting.
 
One of my favorite Dwarf cichlid. I have two pairs of the ones Jeff is selling now, as well as several pairs from different populations (color morphs.) They are really fun to have. Very fiesty for such a little Acara. I always found keeping them to be pretty simple. They like to have some cover in the tank. I usually have a bunch of plastic plants and driftwood and set up territories for pairs to take over and defend. Spawning them is also not too difficult.
 
I really like their look. I love Acaras and these guys got my attention. I researched them but there is nothing like getting first hand info before making a purchase. My taste seems to be moving more towards SA as I mellow. I'll wate to see if Ryan sees this thread if not I'll drop him a PM and pick his brain as well. As always Justin a pleasure to hear from you, thanks.

PS Mahlerfan thanks for the info. I thought you were keeping them but couldn't remember for sure.
 
I was thinking of putting them in a 55 and possibly putting the Krobia in the 90 with the GT. The Krobia and the GT grew out together and I'm thinking the 90 should be big enough even though it's four feet. Thoughts on that?
 
Should work, I've kept them several times in my 38 gallon (36"x15" footprint). Mine were fairly mellow, but since I kept them with dwarf pikes they were always the bottom of the chain. I know one person whose wild pair kept killing apistos in his 40 breeder though, they are fiestier than curviceps for sure. Easy to breed though, gorgeous acaras ....

I just for once that the 'curviceps' for sale were actually curviceps and not dorsigera!! Has happened 3 times now, but as least now I know how to tell the differance!! *l*
 
Thanks darth for the info. Yes, I was reading the differance between the two on the dorsigera the dark bar stops half way and then vert bars as apposed to dark bar all the way on the Cerv.
 
I've kept a few groups of wild dorsigera over the past few years. The first group I got about 3 years ago and raised out with my discus. The second came to me last year and I've been keeping them with various things -- Mesonauta, Heros, Krobia, and smaller Geos. Both wild groups came from Rapps.

I've found that they can sometimes be shy and skittish, but overall they are mostly peaceful with other fish and have awesome breeding colors. They turn almost completely black with a bright purple/red chest and their eyes practically glow. Here are a couple pictures of breeding colors:

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(You can see the male sitting on eggs that were laid in the corner of the tank)
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Here's some courting behavior (notice the colors aren't as dark as the actual breeding colors, but they put on a fun display!).

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I purchased 6 fish in the first group and still have 3 of them in my 150 gallon. They haven't spawned in a long time. I have no idea what the life expectancy is on these fish. I know rams only live a couple years. Maybe they're just getting old?

There were 12 in my group from last year. They came to me very tiny from Rapps and like a lot of small wild fish they were extremely skinny. It took a month or so to fatten them up and then several more months before any spawning started. I kept all 12 in a 55 gallon. It was definitely a sight to see. There was fighting and spawning all over the place. I had fry in there almost constantly between the four pairs that formed. I have since sent all the F0 pairs to my friend in Connecticut and I kept one spawn of the F1s... they're currently about 1 - 1.5".

I would recommend at least a 55 gallon if you want to grow out a decent group and keep them with tankmates. Don't let their small size fool you -- they can be really rough on each other. I tried to separate the pairs that formed into 20 gallon breeding tanks with my first group, and the males all beat up and nearly killed the females. The second time around, I left all of the pairs in the 55 gallon and it worked out much better. I think defending the spawning site from other fish kept the pairs from turning on each other.

Another thing to note is that, at least for me, my dorsigera would never spawn in a community tank with other species of cichlids. Maybe there was too much activity and they couldn't get comfortable enough to spawn. The second I put them in dorsigera-only tanks, they started courting and turning dark. They all started breeding within a day or two. I give them little clay pleco caves to spawn on and females will often lay eggs on top, then move the wrigglers inside the cave once they hatch.

Keep them fairly warm (mine stayed around 82F, except the ones with discus which were at 84F) and keep up with the water changes. That's all I've ever done with mine and they bred like crazy.
 
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