| |||||||||
Apistogramma - Dwarf Cichlids
Astronotus (Oscars)
Boulengerochromis
Cichlasoma - American Ciclids
Crenicichla
Pterophyllum - Freshwater Angelfish
Symphysodon - Discus
Teleogramma
Tilapia
The family Cichlidae is large and very diverse, and is one of the most important families of fish and is a major vertebrate family. It includes some 2000 species, in sizes that range from ca. 3 cm (e.g. Apistogramma) to close to a meter (Boulengerochromis, Cichla), and with morphologies ranging from highly compressed (Pterophyllum, Symphysodon) to extremely elongated (Teleogramma, some Crenicichla spp.). Some species are important food fishes, and many other are valued aquarium fishes. Some notable aquarium cichlids are the angelfish, discus, Jack Dempsey and the oscar.
The common features of cichlids include:
Cichlids are secondary freshwater fish and inhabit most of the Paleotropics (Africa) and the Neotropics (Americas south of ca. 30 deg N). Many species are found in African lakes.
Diets are also diverse: generalized predators, plankton-feeders, herbivores, piscivores, scale-eaters, paedophagus (eat other species' young).
All species show some form of parental care for both eggs and larvae, often extended to free-swimming young until they are several weeks old. Parental care falls into one of three categories: mouthbrooders, substrate brooders, and those that substrate brood the eggs and then mouthbrood the young.
During the 1960s and 70s, the lakes of the Great Rift Valley in Africa were discovered by aquarists, and the great wealth of cichlids endemic to those lakes became a goldmine of novelties for aquarists. Most popular were Lake Tanganyika and Lake Malawi, and many of the species from those lakes remain common in the hobby.
Aquarium cichlids are not the most peaceful aquarium residents, though behaviour varies, and so do their water quality demands and feeding habits.
The main groups of cichlids kept in aquariums