Making some changes.

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Buphy

Dovii
MFK Member
Jun 10, 2015
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So as my dominate male Lyonsi begins to chase his tank mates around more, I am preparing to put in the divider to keep him on 1/3 of the tank. My question now becomes, do I keep my tiger silver dollars? I have 5 and with this divider in, they will be more crowded sharing ~83 gallons with 6 of the 7 Lyonsi.

I'm also considering moving my smallest 2 Lyonsi to my 125 SA "community" tank. With less compotision, will this cause them less stress and help them develop? Or will it destroy their chances of being re-introduced later to be potential mates?

I know I've asked some of these questions before, but with new people bringing experience to the forums, I always like more opinions. Thanks for y'all's responses!
 
What size are the lyonsi, are you trying to get a breeding pair out of that group,
What footprint have the dollars got
 
Putting the subordinate lyonsi in a community until they grow, sounds like a reasonable idea.
Or putting the alpha in a tank by itself.
But be aware if the alpha is in a tank by itself, it will own that tank, and probably not allow any new cichlids, even if they've grown in the community, unless its a totally receptive, in that exact moment, female, when you reintroduce.
Alone the alpha's attitude will be kill first, ask questions later.
Better to introduce it to a tank, that the females own, or have staked claims to.
 
Largest of the Lyonsi are ~5" (the alpha, presumed male, and one other). The smallest are ~2" (2 of them as well). Everyone else falls pretty evenly between them (so 3 others). Yes, I am hoping for a breeding pair.

My current tanks are;
-125 with the Lyonsi and silver dollars.
-75 with my green terror.
-125 SA "community" (severums, geos, dwarf pikes, Denison barbs).
-40 breeder (not set up).

Do you feel that dividing the tank will have the same effect on the alpha male as having him in his own tank? I assume the alpha is male, but truthfully I don't know the gender of any particular fish yet... I want to do what's best for getting a breeding pair of these endangered fish.
 
Females can grow faster and larger, and become alpha type, but not as commonly.
But females can be just as deadly to smaller individual males.
I had a large female Tomocichla tuba wipe out 3 slightly smaller males within 24 hours, because she was ready, and they weren't.

And I have always had trouble dividing tanks of smaller fish from larger ones, especially at the @2" size or smaller.
They have easily slipped thru small spaces where the divider wasn't flush with the sides, so I have preferred separating in different tanks, but that may be my problem.
I've used sumps to hold problem fish (my sumps are almost always at least 2/3 full)
After a while I started keeping a 55 gal tank or 2 on a sump fishless, and at ready just in case one was needed in a pinch, for a beat up individual, or when a male needed to be removed from a tank full of eggs, fry, and a female. These tanks were also good when fry started to overwhelm the breeding tank. Probably why my house had too many tanks, and in every room including bathrooms.


 
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