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Overview:
Easy to keep, peaceful, surface dwelling killifish feeding on flakes, pellets, frozen, and live foods. These do great in an aquarium with other peaceful, appropriately sized community fish. If you need something in the top level of your aquarium, these are worth considering.
Please see the video for more detailed information.
These were collected from the Akio location in the province of Lagos, Nigeria. I can't tell for sure if they are E. grahami, E. sexfasciatus, or E. togolensis, so I am simply calling them E. sp. "Akio" to avoid accidental hybridization.
These are young adults and still have quite a lot of growing and coloring up to do.
Warning: These are expert jumpers! Keep a TIGHT lid!
Some of the prettiest fish on the planet are killifish. This diverse group is sometimes referred to as the "egg-laying tooth carps" in order to distinguish them from their close relatives, the livebearers. In many ways, a killifish is a livebearer that lays eggs. The non-annual species generally live as long as your typical livebearers. The annual species typically last 12-18 months. Like their livebearer relatives, most killies are easy to keep and feed. They are also famously hardy.
Setup Considerations:
Killifish are one of the most diverse groups of fish on the planet. They have adapted to many habitats from hypersaline environments to pristine rainforest streams to temporary pools. Therefore, there is no "one sized fits all" way to keep killifish. However, most killies in the aquarium hobby can be kept in anything from a small bare tank with a sponge filter and a spawning mop to a large planted show aquarium with a community of species with an appropriate size and temperament. The one thing almost every killifish setup needs is a tight fitting lid. Killies are expert jumpers. If there is a hole in the lid, they will find it and they will manage to jump out of it.
Diet:
Most killifish in the aquarium hobby are carnivores. A few of the pupfish species are herbivores, but besides the Florida Flagfish, pupfish are rarely available to the average aquarist. Die-hard killie keepers generally feed their fish lots of live and frozen foods. However, that is not strictly necessary. High quality dry foods such as flakes, pellets, crumbles, etc. are also good food for killies. A rotation which includes frozen and dry foods usually results in fat, sassy killifish.
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Location: Wyoming, United States
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