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African_Fever

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Posts posted by African_Fever

  1. Malawi Luver - just a simple digital camera, a Canon S30 with a dive case. Took a lot of photos, roughly 100 per dive, but got maybe 10 good ones per dive. Most of it was due to my case fogging up more than anything, I really had trouble with that. I would've had a lot more good pictures but I couldn't get the camera to stop fogging up. Finally figured it out at the end. The fish were pretty easy to photograph, they're always interested in you and when diving they don't take off at all like they do when snorkelling. I've got some more pics on a disc that I hope to work on this week and post. I'll let everyone know when they're up.

  2. I think you've actually got a pretty good setup going there; nothing too territorial (thought I've never had the zebra obliquidens) besides the afras, which hopefully won't get too large anyways. And I can help you out in while with the Mel. joanjohnsonae if you're willing to wait for F1's B) Looks like a great setup Ty! The only real problem I could see is not enough males. I know a lot people either believe in 1 or three or more males to spread aggression between males a little more evenly.

  3. Just place a marble over the hole in a clay pot and use potting soil (make sure it's sterile and has no additives). Cover the soil with gravel and hope your fish don't decide it's the perfect place to start digging. If they do insist on digging, then place some slate or other rocks on top of the gravel. I'm actually about to try it myself (a good friend of mine used to always do it b/c it made it much easier to remove plants to catch fish). Good luck and let us know how it turns out.

    Kyle

  4. I've got a ton of jungle vals in my largest tank with my WC mbuna. There's about 6" of leaves from them at the surface, and it gives a good place for fish to hide, as well as providing and interesting effect of the light through the leaves. I also have Cryptocoryne affinis along the bottom, and it does get nipped a bit, but if it's placed where the fish don't dig it does really well. I've got plenty of both plants if you're interested, $1 each for crypts and $2 each for jungle vals.

  5. The thing with 'hoping' that he'll find a female saulosi is just that, hoping. Even if you have numerous females in the tank with him, the simple matter is that he is still a male, and being dominant ( I would assume), he'll breed with whatever females are around, unless you find a male lab that becomes dominant or strong enough to compete. I would think that just about anything would cross under the right circumstances, just look at the Aulonocara/Mbuna hybrid in the ob peacock. People must be aware of the easy possibility of hybridization in fish when kept in tanks together and stop keeping fish that will so readily interbreed together. Even with Haps and peacocks, I'd never keep two species from the same genus together just in case there were the chance of mixing. Unless you're there and watching every single spawn you can't guarantee a purebred fish.

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