Editing Neolamprologus multifasciatus

Jump to: navigation, search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

This page supports semantic in-text annotations (e.g. "[[Is specified as::World Heritage Site]]") to build structured and queryable content provided by Semantic MediaWiki. For a comprehensive description on how to use annotations or the #ask parser function, please have a look at the getting started, in-text annotation, or inline queries help pages.

Latest revision Your text
Line 35: Line 35:
  
 
== Origin ==
 
== Origin ==
: Endemic to Lake Tanganyika, where it lives in open sandy areas with large quantities of Neothuma snail shells. The cichlids use these snail shells as shelter.
+
: Endemic to Lake Tanganyika, where it lives in open sandy areas with large quantities of Neothuma snail shells. The cichlids use these snails are shelter
  
 
        
 
        
Line 54: Line 54:
 
        
 
        
 
== Environment specifics ==
 
== Environment specifics ==
:A harem of one male and three or four females will work well in a 3 gallon tank, but a much larger tank is needed if multiple males are to be kept. The tank should have at least 3 inches of sand and at least 2 shells for every cichlid: the shells should be fairly large, such as escargot shells. Ideally use genuine neothauma shells (although these can be expensive). This fish does not take nitrates very well, and two 25% water changes a week are a good idea with any Tanganyikan cichlid.
+
:A harem of one male and three or four females will work well in a 10 gallon tank, but a much larger tank is needed if multiple males are to be kept. The tank should have at least 2 inches of sand and at least 2 shells for every cichlid: the shells should be fairly large, such as escargot shells. These fish does not take nitrates very well, and two 25% water changes a week are a good idea with any Tanganyikan cichlid.
  
 
        
 
        
Line 62: Line 62:
 
        
 
        
 
== Identification ==
 
== Identification ==
:Very small cichlids which live in snail shells. They can easily be confused with neolamprologus similis, but can be distinguished by using their stripes - similis looks like it has light stripes on a dark body, while multifasciatus appears to have dark stripes on a light body. Similis will also not live as a harem in a 3 gallon and need to kept as pairs in such small tanks, so being able to tell the difference is important.
+
:Very small cichlids which live in snail shells. They can easily be confused with neolamprologus similis, but can be distinguished by using their stripes - similis looks like it has light stripes on a dark body, while multifasciatus appears to have dark stripes on a light body. Similis will also not live as a harem in a 3.5 gallon and need to kept as pairs in such small tanks, so being able to tell the difference is important.
  
 
        
 
        

Please note that all contributions to The Aquarium Wiki are considered to be released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (see The Aquarium Wiki:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)

Clicking on these items will add those character or phrases into the field above.

General Characters

°C °F ° ± × ÷ ¯ #
¹ ² ³ ½ ¼ ¾ © ® £ ¥
<sup></sup> <sub></sub> <ref></ref> <references/>

Articles Standards

#REDIRECT [[ ]]
{{Needimage}}
{{mergefrom}}
{{mergeto}}
{{Bad Format}}
{{stub}}
{{Distinguish Dangerous}}

Conversion Templates

{{F|temp1|temp2}}
{{C|temp1|temp2}}
{{in|length1|length2}}
{{cm|length1|length2}}
{{L|vollum1|vollum2}}
{{gal|vollum1|vollum2}}
{{d|degree1|degree2}} - deg. and ppm
{{ppm|ppm1|ppm2}} - ppm and deg.


Copyright Tags

{{Rights reserved |title= |url= |from= |details=}}
{{PD-release}}
{{No rights reserved}}
{{No Image Copyright Information |url= |comments=}}
{{CC-BY |version= |source= |author=}}
{{CC-BY-SA |version= |source= |author=}}
{{CC-BY-ND |version= |source= |author=}}
{{CC-BY-NC |version= |source= |author=}}
{{CC-BY-NC-ND |version= |source= |author=}}
{{CC-BY-NC-SA |version= |source= |author=}}



{{Creative Commons |License= |url= |details=}}
{{Product-review}}

Categories

[[Category:]]
[[Category:Glossary]]�
[[Category:Glossary - Plants]]�
[[Category:Fish Species]]�.
[[Category:Fish (Freshwater)]]�.
[[Category:Amphibians]]�
[[Category:Cat Fish]]�
[[Category:Companies]]�
[[Category:Product Review]]�
[[Category:Products]]�
[[Category:Coral (Saltwater)]]�
[[Category:Invertebrates]]�
[[Category:Invertebrates (Freshwater)]]�
[[Category:Invertebrates (Saltwater)]]�
[[Category:Plants (Freshwater)]]�
[[Category:Images - Amphibians]]�
[[Category:Images - Invertebrates]]�
[[Category:Images - Invertebrates (Freshwater)]]�
[[Category:Images - Fish (Freshwater)]]�
[[Category:Images - Commercial Products]]�