
Lake Tanganyika cichlids — species, locations & maps
Lake Tanganyika cichlids — species, locations & maps

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Lake Tanganyika cichlids — species, locations & maps.
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Each individual strongly defends its own territory, therefore a large aquarium is essential. In sufficiently spacious tanks, several individuals may be kept together, preferably in a harem structure with one male and multiple females. Suitable tankmates are species occupying other zones of the aquarium, such as robust sand-dwellers.
Clutch size usually ranges from 50 to 100 greenish eggs. After fertilization, the male leaves immediately, while the female alone guards eggs and fry. Mortality is high, and typically only a small number of fry reach the free-swimming stage.
Wild-caught specimens frequently exhibit swim-bladder dysfunction after import or relocation, often resting motionless on the bottom for extended periods before recovery. Similar problems may reappear after handling or transfer between aquaria.
Comparison with Neolamprologus timidus: Although often confused with N. timidus, the two species differ in several consistent morphological traits. Caudal-fin shape is highly variable in N. furcifer and overlaps with that of N. timidus, and is therefore not a reliable diagnostic character. More reliable differences include cheek squamation (cheek scaled in N. timidus vs. naked in N. furcifer), pelvic-fin structure (first soft ray longer than the second in N. timidus, whereas the second soft ray is longer than the first in N. furcifer), and proportionally longer head and pectoral fins in N. timidus.
Melanin pattern also differs: adult N. timidus lacks a dark spot at the caudal-fin base and may show thin, distinct horizontal stripes on the trunk, while N. furcifer typically shows thicker and less distinct markings.
Molecular phylogenetic analyses based on both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA place N. furcifer and N. timidus in separate clades within Lamprologini, each associated with different related species, supporting their clear separation as distinct species.
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