I was wondering if anyone else has witnessed this? I know that there are color differences between dominant/sub-dominant males. I also know that colors change with stress and water conditions. However I noticed that with my Mbuna when I first turn on the lights in the morning most of them appear to be washed out in color. Within minutes however most of their color reappears along with their barring and other markings. I find this fascinating and was wondering if all cichlids (Tangs, Victorians, CA/SA) changed colors/markings in this manner?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Mbuna color variances
Collapse
X
-
Mbuna color variances
120g - Tropheus Moorii Kambwimba
180g - Petrochromis Macrognathus Dine/Tropheus Moorii Namansi I
"Any man who is under 30, and is not a liberal, has not heart; and any man who is over 30, and is not a conservative, has no brains"....Winston Churchill
"We sleep soundly in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence upon those who would do us harm"....Winston ChurchillTags: None
-
For some reason 3 of my 6 Demasoni have not returned to their normal color today. They are pale blue with very faint barring. I noticed this with the Demasoni at City Pets the last time I was there. Only 2 of mine are from there. Wonder what the cause is?120g - Tropheus Moorii Kambwimba
180g - Petrochromis Macrognathus Dine/Tropheus Moorii Namansi I
"Any man who is under 30, and is not a liberal, has not heart; and any man who is over 30, and is not a conservative, has no brains"....Winston Churchill
"We sleep soundly in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence upon those who would do us harm"....Winston Churchill
Comment
-
I have mbuna mbamba bays and the sub male tends to blend in with the females and the alpha female tends to have extreme color in comparison to the sub females. However... when the females are swimming around with a mouth full of babies their color changes yet again. The best color I see is during feeding from my alpha male...he becomes a brilliant light purple with extremely black stripes. I love it. Oh yes... during sleep, their colors become washed out.....or when they are stressed the same thing happens.5.5 fw fluval chi - class N top bar snake chested endlers/ red marble bn/ 4 stripe RCS/ pumpkin shrimp
20 sw cube - a few damsels and a colony of bristleworms
29 fw - self cloning crayfish..which can't seem to clone haha
29 fw - mollies / albino bristlenose / ghost shrimp and snowball shrimp/ glo danios
29 fw - crs/ amano/tiger shrimp /assassins/ whiptails/ plants/ 3 emerald cories
55 fw - steatocranus casaurius (20ish)/ tetras/ rainbows/large Jack Dempsey
75 fw - large Jack Dempseys / pictus cat/ yoyo loach/ Red gippicep/ 10+" oscar/ parrot
Comment
-
Originally posted by Rico View Postmark if you catch your geo's sleeping at around 4am and cut the lights on you will notice the color is a little washed out.I make people happy
Comment
-
I know this is an old post, but I just read it. Recently, I was trying to net a couple of young male red top trewavassaes; in the same tank were quite a number of male and female fish - alledgedly Copadichromis azureus. After a while I noticed that some of the red top males were doing a pretty fair impression of azureus females! I guess they decided they were the least noticeable fish around them so that is what they went for. At least that is who it looked to me.
Comment
Comment