Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Kribensis

This post is specially dedicated to my regular blog reader: Sank
Thanks for all your comments. Hope you like this post!


Data Sheet

Scientific Name: Pelvicachromis pulcher
Family: Cichlids
Origin:Africa
Adult Size:3-4 inches (8-10 cm)
8 cm (female), 10 cm (male)
Social:Good with same size or larger fish.
Lifespan:5 years
Tank Level: Bottom Dweller

Minimum Tank Size:20 Gallons
Diet:Omnivore, eats most food
Breeding:Egglayer
Care:Easy, hardy fish
Ideal pH: 6.8-7.5
Temperature: 72-79 F (22-26 C)
Tank setup:

Some caves and plants in the aquarium.


Sexing:
Females are smaller, and stubbier and brighter





Description:

The Latin translation of "Pelva" meaning 'belly,' "chromis" meaning 'color,' and "pulcher" meaning 'beautiful', describes the fish quite well. During spawning season the female sports a brilliant cherry red colored belly.

Males and females can generally be separated by their body size, shape, colors, and fins. Males are typically longer than the females, while the females have larger stomachs, which are purple/red. Females have rounded dorsal fins, whereas the male’s dorsal fin ends in a point.

Habitat/Care:

Kribensis is an undemanding fish when it comes to water conditions, which is another reason it's so popular. It originates from the drainage area at the mouth of the Ethiop River, Niger delta, where a variety of water conditions can be seen. The water of the low lying black-water streams is acidic and very soft, while the delta waters are slightly brackish, more alkaline, and far harder than the streams that feed it.

It is ideal to provide caves to your kribensis as they like some space where they can retreat to (small pots placed on the sides would do). It provides them with more security, and create an environment that mimics the streams they come from.

The tank itself should be well planted with real or artificial plants. Because they like to burrow they may uproot plants. However, they are generally not destructive to the vegetation.

In addition to caves and plants to provide cover, an area for open swimming should be available. Characteristic of other cichlids, Kribensis are fast swimmers who can change direction in an instant and stop on a dime. They are territorial and if cramped may become aggressive, so take care to avoid overstocking the tank.

Mixing with other fishes:

Kribensis is often kept in a community tank, however care should be taken in choosing tank-mates. Although they are a peaceful fish, they may nip the fins of slow moving fish such as Angel fish. If other cichlids will be in the community tank, choose a species that is not bottom dwelling. That way they will not compete for the same territory. Avoid keeping them with another cave dwelling species, as Kribensis love their caves.

Diet:

Kribensis are omnivorous, and will eat most aquarium foods, including granular, flake, live or frozen foods.

Breeding:

Kribensis will form monogamous pairs in the aquarium. What this means is that you only need one male and one female to have several successful breedings.

To breed these fish, they should have at least 20 gallons of water in an aquarium to themselves because they will vigorously defend their eggs and fry and any other tank occupants would have quite a torrid time. Set the tank up with a mature sponge filter and a couple of caves and the temp set to 77 to 80°F. Include lots of live food in their diet and freeze dried Tubifex.

When the Kribensis decides to breed, it will usually select a flower pot or other small cave to breed in. If there are multiple females in a tank, and a pair hasn’t formed yet, the females will lower their pelvic fins slightly so that they look fatter! Perhaps a larger belly is a sign of fertility in the fish, and that this helps to inform the male which is to the best possible mate. Almost without fail, the male Kribensis will always choose the female that has the largest stomach. If there are multiple males in the tank, you will see the females displaying for all of them, but the largest males will attract the largest amount of interest from the largest females.

The pair will almost always spawn inside one of the caves and usually on the roof. Both parents will guard the eggs and fry but not always perfectly at first and they may even eat their first couple of broods, this is normal for Cichlids, they quite often need a few attempts before they get it right.

A sign that the pair have bred is that disappearance of the female for a week. Also the male will skittishly swim all around the tank. After the week (5-10 days) are up, the female will emerge with a ton of little swimming blobs. The blobs will follow the female very closely and eat anything they can find.

Each night, the fry will return to the cave that is used as their home. This may not always be the cave where they were spawned, but usually will be if you have left the fish alone for the most part. Each morning, the female will leave the cave first and scout the tank. Once she is sure that the coast is clear, she will return to the cave and the fry will begin moving out in their strange swarm-like shape again.

They are relatively easy to feed and will eat newly hatched brine shrimps, powdered flake and liquid fry food. They grow quite quickly and after about a couple of weeks the fry will spread out away from the parents. The parents should now be removed and the fry left on their own. With a varied diet and plenty of water changes the fry will be almost mature and can take care of themselves after 8 to 12 weeks. Then you have to figure out what to do with 80-120 Kribensis! :)

Photo Galley

Got a photo? Contact me.


A Kribensis mother and the fry


Female Kribensis

Pair with fry

Pair of Kribs






References Cited:

1. David Goodwin (2001), The Aquarium Fish Handbook, D & S books, England.
2. Kribensis, [Online], Available http://groups.msn.com/Breedingtropicalfish/kribs.msnw
3.
Pelvicachromis pulcher, [Online], Available http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/africansgeneral/p/kribensis.htm
4. The Krib (Pelvicachromis pulcher), [Online], Available http://www.theaquarians.net/ArticlesandWallpapers/fish_profile_kribensis.htm

56 comments:

Sank said...

Thanks Eugene! My favorite fish, and extremely well covered. Good work!

Eugene said...

Welcome :) Glad you like it

Steve said...

Awsome pictures!

suresh said...

Hi Eugene, excellent website. I couldn't find krib in singapore aquariums recently. Do you have any idea where can I buy this?

Kebu said...

Eugene, awesome pictures. Also, great description of the whole spawning process and related krib behaviour! Now if I only I can get my pair to stop fighting!

Anonymous said...

Thanks. my pair are in a large community aquarium with angels and tetras and platies. they are doing great.

Anonymous said...

hi all,
i have a pair of kribensis in a 48 litre with some barbs convicts and parrots with lots of caves and plants to hide in but they dont seem to be breeding and i dont understand please help me.
duggie

Anonymous said...

I have now tried twice to breed theese, yet within a few days the female has died. The fist attempt the male ripped the female to shreds, but we got another paire and the female died the first night we had her. Both males have been fine, but we don't know why. We've done a water test, Nitate and Nitrie a tiny bit high, but we've fixed that now and it has only been like that a day or two, so it couldn't have affected the other female or male. Confused! We have a UFO 350 Aqua One Tank,so it is quite small yet the man at the shop was breeding them in a tiny goldfish tank sucsesfully. If anyone has any information that could help please tell, Thank You!

Anonymous said...

Maybe get a bigger tank. Dont make those fish suffer in a ten gallon. Put them in at least a 55 gallon. I have tons of them in a 75 galon, And a 220 gallon fish tank. You have to relize that fish are animals too!!! Dont torqure them!!!!!

Anonymous said...

Hi there, anyone know why these guys are biting the scales off my lager fish like my oscars? is it a territorial thing or is it not the cichlids and its a fungal thing?

Eugene said...

Hi, Wooah aggresive kris = having babies soon and getting territorial. :) Congradulations!

Anonymous said...

Hi everyone! I have a ten gallon tank and i was doing a water change yesterday. Low and behold my Kribs have had babies behind my back!! It looked like more than 50! What should i do with the fry?

Eugene said...

Raise them - then auction them off at Ebay when the frys are matured enough?

If you got the frys in a community tank, I would not worry about them much. Many of these frys will end up in the stomaches of bigger fish... :(

Anonymous said...

Can anyone tell me where I can buy a male krib in Singapore? Desperate! I only have a female left. need a male about 2inches as my female is about 1 1/2 inch.

Eugene said...

Kribs are available at seasonal periods, but I saw some Kribs near an aquarium in Potong Pasir MRT sometime back. You may like to try there.

Eugene

Anonymous said...

Where exactly is the store in Potong Pasir? I wish to go get it on sat. what about serangoon north any chance there? I use to get my fish at this guppy farm in Neo Tiew but they have given up breeding kribs already. So I'm lost! Thanks.

Eugene said...

Hi,

It is 5 min walk from potong pasir MRT, about a short walk from McDonald and next to a bicycle repair shop. I don't have the address of the place, sorry.

regards,

Eugene

Anonymous said...

Hi, I bought 5 Kribs about 3 years ago, and succesfully bred from them. Mum and Dad have since died, but I still have all of the offspring that survived, approx 15, which are now about 2 years old. They have completely taken over my tank and I cannot keep any other fish due to fear of loosing them. If anyone is interested in having them for free (will have to pick up) they are welcome. Dont get me wrong, I love them (as I bred them) but my partner wants a mixture of spiecies. If anyone is interested please contact me on alisonburnett@hotmail.co.uk. (Newport, Gwent, South Wales)

Anonymous said...

Hi E - great site!
I plan to buy a pair of Kribensis', but I have a handful of Corydoras living on the bottom too - Will they be territorial/aggressive (when they are not expecting) towards this species?

best wishes from DK

Eugene said...

Hi DK,

Krib and Corydoras would probably get along fine. :) Most fishes are not aggressive towards Corydoras.

Regards,

Eugene

Anonymous said...

I have a ten-gallon. Would a male-female pair fit in here?

Eugene said...

I don't think you have any problem fitting a male / female in a 10 gallon tank if they are only fish there. :)

Anonymous said...

Hi Eugene, ive recently bread kribs and have about 80 fry theyve only been hatched 4 about 4 days i also have a breeding pair of firemouths that are causing hassle what 2 do?

Eugene said...

Well, separate the frys in a smaller tank. Then try to raise them and sell or give them to friends when they are bigger? Kribs are rare and many people in singapore would love to have them. :)

Regards,
Eugene

Anonymous said...

Hi , can anybody help i have a 1male and 1 female kribensis, they have just had there first babies all going well, but now the male has gone quiet all he does is stay in a cave or under bogwood lost his colour and is not eating , does he have some form of desease or is this normal behaviour, can anybody help thanks

Anonymous said...

mine aren't peaceful, they attack anything that comes near their rock

Anonymous said...

hi Eugene. Any updates on where I can get a female Krib in singapore? I'm desperate for my lone male to breed. Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Kribs are available currently from Qianhu fish farm in Singapore. not bad quality too!

Anonymous said...

By the way, they are known as Dwarf Rainbow Cichlid at Qianhu.

Anonymous said...

Hi there Eugene! Great web page! Was thinking of getting some Kribs as they are only $9 each. I have Discus(5),Danyos + cardinals. Will they be ok in there? And how will the other fish react? Its nice and calm, will they disrupt? The lady at the pet shop didn't know?? Jodie from Brisbane Australia.

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Jolie,

I don't recommend it - they can eat your cardinals if they are big enough and your cardinals are small, and can be aggressive. Better tanks mates would be other Cichlids.

But you could have guppies, swordtails, or other tetras such as black widow tetras that will be a peaceful with your current aquarium population.

Regards,

Eugene

whiskey said...

Great info... Just thought I would add, that krib's are mouth brooders.. meaning they can put the eggs and fry in there mouth...

shelley said...

hi, i have 3 male kribs and 1 female (mistook one of the males for a female in the shop) in one tank currently, there are three distinct caves in the tank which the males have all now taken over and the poor female is left a bit stressed on the outside in a 'nook'. they are all quite immature (not coloured at all or a slight tinge). if i leave them be until they mature will one of the males eventually pair off with the female? Currently they don't really come out of their caves so i dont know if they will ever interact with her!
I have also heard that having the female in the tank established first then introducing a male works better, if so i have another tank i could put the males in for a while? BUT i also did this once with a different female i had and i put two different males in on different occasions and she destroyed them both, despite being very red in the belly.

Robert Hunter said...

Dear Eugine while doing my research on my kribensis because they looked different i found out i have a male and a female. They have recently been showing mating signs and then i found the eggs they are the only fish in the tank but the website said i needed more fish e.g barbs for the kribs to chase. I dont think this is correct because it would just put them under more stress. Please reply.

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Hi Robert,

You are right - having other fish can induce stress and barbs may eat the eggs and frys. During mating and guarding the frys, the fishes are highly territorial and may attack other fishes as well.

Please may I know where did you get your source that barbs may help in breeding Kris?

Regards,

Eugene

Robert Hunter said...

Im afraid to say that I cannot locate the website but I am certain it was from a fish breeders experiences. My kribensis laid their eggs in a small cave in which I could see some of the eggs. Then about two days after she had laid them (the male was guarding the tank and swimming round whilst the female tended to the eggs so they were doing everything right) the eggs started disappearing. Would she be eating them or would she have moved them because she then started coming out of the cave more often and now she has abandoned the cave. Why is this. Please reply.

Matthew Malins said...

Im thinking of buying a pair of kribs for my 30G new set up tank. However i have read they are territorial so i was wondering what schooling fish would go in well with them both. I was thinking like 10 rummy nose tetra's?

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Mattew,

your Kribs will probably tear the rummy nose into shreds... I recommend other Cichlids.

Regards,

Eugene

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Hunter,

Apologies for the late reply - I did some research again to refresh my memory, and I found that Kribs do eat their eggs, especially those that got fungus or are dead so that the rest will not be impacted.

There is a third possibility, the eggs have hatched into tiny frys. Later, the female may come out of the cave with frys.

:) Do watch and let me know.

Eugene

Robert said...

I think the eggs were dead because it has been about 12 days since the eggs were laid but no frys :( how long until they will try again

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Robert,

I am not sure about this - I am sorry. :(

Regards,

Eugene

Robert said...

my kribensis started breeding again recently. both the stomachs were bright red and then the female went inside the cave for about a week without an appearance. then the male rushed into the cave and forced the female out. when she tried to go back in he nearly killed her. we were forced to put the female in a different tank. we thought the eggs had died but then fry emerged from the cave. we put the female back in and the male tried to kill her again. he is now rearing the fry by himself. why has he done this

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Robert,

The male is jealously guarding the fry. :) For now separate the fishes until the fries are grown. This is rare, but it has been known to happen occasionally.

Regards,

Eugene

Iggy said...

I would love some advice- my pair of kribs have been in a relatively new tank a couple of hours with some corys and a gourami and bristlenose, and the female krib is attacking all others in the tank, espeically the male krib! he has been forced onto a leaf 3/4 high up the tank as she stalks the gravel, nipping my corys... surely not breeding? or have I got an angry fish?

fishlover said...

purchased a pair a few days ago and added a mollie male a few days ago to see how they would react ..well they killed him and left not much of him floating at the top of the aquarium..i don't think they make good community fish.

fishlover said...

Shelly, Notice my male would leave the female out as well put in new cave for female and the male now..goes freely now from hers to his...I guess the males Rule!

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Err Fish Lover,

I think I should make a correction "Kris are a good community fish only with other Cichlids or fishes that are much bigger than them."

Mollies are food for these fishes.

Perhaps it is not so clear from my post above.

Regards,

fishlover said...

These fish are beautiful..I have watched my pair i have named Bonnie and Clyde..they may be spawning i see the male shimmy around the female..also noted they are very shy and don't like a lot of light note they are very active with just light from a nearby window as the light source they come out of their caves and swim all around looking for food after i put it in..and it seems the female finds food spits it out in places and the male goes to the very same spots and eats the food she found and left..interesting behavior and good that she looks out for him.

Anonymous said...

Great fish! Nice blog!
These were my first successfully bred fish back when I kept fish as a young teenager (about 1970!). Sold the fry to a local shop and went wild with the proceeds - bought fish and gear (well, I made about $10).
==Bruce R

kristin said...

How many kribensis can u keep in one tank?? Already have two but they're so nice I'd like to add more as we just lost our cockatoo cichlids.

Anonymous said...

My Kribs have bred for the first time. I've been studying for an exam so I've hardly looked at my tank until today when I spotted the mother guarding 7 fry as they forage round my tank. I'm wondering how old they are, they are about 10 milimeters long?
Its a community tank and I have Dennison Barbs who could swallow these babies whole but I'd love them to survive! Reading the information about the Kribs becoming aggressive after breeding, I'm wondering now whether they were responsible for ripping the fins off 2 of my green tiger barbs a couple of weeks back? It would be good to solve that mystery.

rabsink said...

these fish r just like my wife...aggressive when pregnent

Missy D. said...

Do you know if these types of fish eat live shrimp? I purchased quite a few different types of shrimp lately and they are disappearing... but I can't tell who the culprit is. Could it be my one and only Kribensis?

Yu-Jin Lim said...

Most kribs love to eat shrimps. :)

Anonymous said...

I have a 30 gal community and a pair of kribs, where the male just chases the female away any time he sees her, she is still quite young, and doesn't have a red stomach...What is happening and how can I make them bred?

Anonymous said...

I have a pari of Kribs that have breed once already in a 10 gallon. I sold 55 babies for $55 Can. dollars

Now there are more eggs, but the fish will not eat. Is this normal?

There were more eggs about 2 months ago, but nothing happened. They didn't eat then either.

Any info would be helpful

April