How many F1 Moba Frontosa would you Get?

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo

Arkangel77

Piranha
MFK Member
Aug 19, 2009
545
110
76
Carriere
I am setting up a new Frontosa tank. I am hopping to finish up with 7 or 8 Females once they are grown. SO if it were you, How many Fry would you start with? Thanks for your input.

Arkangel77
 
neutrino neutrino

volume and dimension of tank?
 
  • Like
Reactions: tlindsey
I don't really Understand how tank dimensions apply to the question I asked...

I currently have -
a 60 Gallon 36 x 20 x 20
a 90 Gallon 48 x 18 x 24
a 120 Gallon 72 x 24 x 24
a 125 Gallon 72 x 18 x 21
& a 360 Gallon 96 x 30 x 29

Thanks, Arkangel77
 
If you want 7,8 females (plus at least one male, I assume?), then tank size is a huge factor for them as adults. Adult females alone, you're talking about 8-9 inch fish, sometimes larger, and males can easily be 11-12 inches, some larger. Both have some bulk and weight to them, especially males, of course. Also, (unlike Malawi cichlids) they shouldn't be-- and don't like to be-- crowded.

There's not really a definitive answer or magic number to guarantee M/F numbers when growing out juvies. You can start with the assumption of close to a statistical 50/50 ratio on average, but it doesn't guarantee what will happen in any particular group, which can be either male or female heavy. A lot of people start with ten, hoping for at least some males and some females, but you might get 7 females or you might get 2-- I've seen both happen multiple times. If I wanted the best odds of 7,8 females I'd definitely start with more than 10.

Is your objective to get a breeding group, an all female display tank, or...?
 
If you want 7,8 females (plus at least one male, I assume?), then tank size is a huge factor for them as adults. Adult females alone, you're talking about 8-9 inch fish, sometimes larger, and males can easily be 11-12 inches, some larger. Both have some bulk and weight to them, especially males, of course. Also, (unlike Malawi cichlids) they shouldn't be-- and don't like to be-- crowded.

There's not really a definitive answer or a magic number to guarantee M/F numbers when growing out juvies. You can start with the assumption of close to a statistical 50/50 ratio on average, but it doesn't guarantee what will happen in any particular group, which can be either male or female heavy. A lot of people start with ten, hoping for at least some males and some females, but you might get 7 females or you might get 2-- I've seen both happen multiple times. If I wanted the best odds of 7,8 females I'd definitely start with more than 10.

Is your objective to get a breeding group, an all female display tank, or...?
Thatn you for the responce. Thats Kinda where my head was at. I just was wondering what others thought bassed off there experiances. I guess I could mention over the last 15 years or so I have had a few different Wild Caught Groups. I am aware of the sizes adults can reach. I even had a group that was breeding although I was not very good as pulling the eggs.
 
I don't really Understand how tank dimensions apply to the question I asked...

I currently have -
a 60 Gallon 36 x 20 x 20
a 90 Gallon 48 x 18 x 24
a 120 Gallon 72 x 24 x 24
a 125 Gallon 72 x 18 x 21
& a 360 Gallon 96 x 30 x 29

Thanks, Arkangel77


I guess my head was going in a different direction. Strictly going off numbers, I would get as many fry as I could afford to comfortably grow out to a sexable size, keep the final group, and sell off the rest. Same applies to any group of juvies. As neutrino neutrino stated, m/f ratios in groups of juvies can go in any direction.

I recall years ago when a local breeder friend bought a large group of WC Tropheus Ilangi from a very well known importer in the US. I believe it was a group of 24, supposedly sexed adult fish. To get them up here to the frozen north I believe each fish ended up costing $40+ CAD. A sizeable investment, over 1K. A stunning colony of Tropheus but after a year of only ever seeing a single female holding, out of frustration one day he removed each fish one by one & carefully vented them. To his horror there was only that one single female. So he put her, and a male, in a large tank full of Malawi cichlids and they bred for him for a number of years. The males he dumped at a loss.

I could be wrong, but I don't think that this vendor pulled a fast one, he simply didn't do his due diligence, netted out a large group of fish, and assumed that there would be a reasonable mix of males to females.
 
Thanks for the replies guys, it's helpful
 
  • Like
Reactions: RD. and neutrino
MonsterFishKeepers.com