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Apistogramma caetei Breeding Guide

Breeding Apistogramma caetei: cave spawning, up to 200 eggs on the cave ceiling tended by the female, harem spawner from the Caete river.

Overview

Apistogramma caetei is a dwarf cichlid from the Apeu and Caete rivers in Braganca, Para, Brazil. FishBase records males to 3.6 cm SL and females to 4.0 cm, with a broad temperature tolerance of 23-30 C and pH around 6.5-7.0. It is a cave spawner with female brood care and behaves as a harem spawner when the opportunity arises.

Sexing

FishBase records females slightly larger than males in standard length for this species (males to 3.6 cm, females to 4.0 cm SL). For the genus, males additionally tend to show more extended, pointed unpaired fins and stronger colour.

Conditioning

The species is a carnivorous micropredator (FishBase trophic level about 3.3) best conditioned on small live and frozen invertebrate foods. It tolerates a wide temperature range, making conditioning relatively forgiving.

Breeding Setup

  • Temperature: 23-30 C (FishBase)
  • pH: 6.5-7.0 (FishBase)
  • dH: from about 10 (FishBase)
  • Spawning sites: enclosed caves; eggs deposited on the cave ceiling
  • Layout: sand substrate with stones forming caves to allow a harem

Spawning Behavior & Trigger

FishBase states that a maximum of 200 eggs are deposited on the cave ceiling and the female tends the clutch, and that the species is a harem spawner when the opportunity arises. Consistent with the genus, a male holds a territory containing several females. Stable, soft to neutral, warm water reproducing the natural habitat encourages spawning.

Egg & Fry Care

The female tends the clutch of up to 200 eggs on the cave ceiling and guards the larvae and free-swimming fry, while the male defends the territory, following the harem care pattern recorded for this species and the genus. For Apistogramma generally, warmer water tends to produce more males.

Common Challenges

This is one of the hardier, more adaptable species in the genus, so the main concerns are providing secure caves and stable water. IUCN lists A. caetei as Least Concern (assessed 2018).

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