We did research on Mbuna behavior, and we know males get territorial when a female are on the reef. We make sure to have adequate housing space in the rocks for subdominant males as well as fry.The fish in your tank are males. With luck, they may co-exist. But once you have females in the tank and they attempt to breed, each species will try to establish their own territory by chasing or killing others.
We made sure to leave areas sandy. The tank is about 40 gallons, the smallest space recommended for Mbunas. I don't know the water parameters as it's not my tank, but the fish are indeed thriving from video my aunt shares. Thanks for the recommendation for the rocks! I'll have to look into it.They need at least some sandy areas in the tank. It should not be all lava rock. Also, although lava rock is ok, better would be to use carbonate-type rocks, or a mixture including carbonate-based sand. That is particularly important if your water’s pH is neutral or less, which those fish do not thrive in. What size is the tank? It looks small for mbuna. Good luck!
Hey bud! I can identify some.I'm hooked on Mbuna at the moment a great group of fish.
Do you know what species you have in there? I can't quite ID all of them? I can see a few Metriaclima species in there (red zebra and the cobalt blue) and I think you have some kind of Maingaino but I've not seen the cross sort of pattern on the first set of photos before. Long term you might struggle with a 40g with some of these species, though when I say long term things can go bad over night with these fish... but also the wonderful thing about Mbuna is they are so unpredictable it might be fine.
Wills
Ah, that was the WIP name. Thanks for reminding me.But there are no Labidochromis that I can see!
Good set up - you'll enjoy that tank.