Common Name: Eduardi, Eduard's Mbuna, Pindanni,
Powder Blue Cichlid
Synonyms: Pseudotropheus pindanni, Pseudotropheus
eduardi, Aseudotropheus socolofi
Family: Cichlidae
Meaning of Name: Pseudo = false, Tropheus
is a genus from Lake Tanganyika. Socolof refers to Florida fish-farmer Ross
Socolof
Habitat: Lake Malawi along the Mozambique shore from
Tumbi Point to Cóbuè. It was introduced to Thumbi Island and
Otter Islands for collecting convenience but these spots never took hold and
those populations are presumed to no longer be there.
Description: The fish is basically a bright powder
blue fish with a black submarginal band in the dorsal, with black also in
the caudal, pelvic and anal fins. There is no difference in the males and
the females colouration. They do have egg spots including the females. I
do find that the males are brighter coloured though. Some females almost
appear grey. However the populations of socolofi at Cóbuè and
Mbweca do not have the black in the dorsal fins.
Size: In the lake is 7 cm or 3 inches and tank raised
specimens can reach 16 cm or 6.3 inches basically doubling the size. It
should be kept at 77-82F
Food: In the wild it picks the algae from the biocover
on the rocks. In the aquarium this fish will eat everything offered to it.
These fish were originally owned by my parents. They
were raised in a 33g tank along with some Pseudotropheus acei and Melanochromis
johanni. Five fry eventually turned into 1 female and four males. However
since this was such a small tank three of the males got killed in this tank
over a period of three months. The female did carry to term several times
in this tank. We even had a single solitary survivor who lived in a pile of
small rocks. He is currently in one of my fry tanks. My father wanted some
less aggressive fish so I sold most of his fish at auctions and kept the
socolofi pair myself. I put them into my 200g tank. This tank has a pH of
8 and a temperature of about 78F. There is a sand substrate and lots of broken
pieces of pottery, pots, and shells in this tank as decoration. There are
no plants as there is no light above the tank. It gets room light and light
from a nearby window. It was actually odd to see such a dominant fish actually
go down a few pegs in the tank. He eventually found a niche in the tank somewhere
near the top of the dominance structure. Within a week of being in the tank;
the female was already holding. Eighteen days later I stripped 15 fry from
her and placed them in a 20g tank with some S. fryeri fry that are a few
weeks older. I also added more fryeri fry that were done a week later. I
did not lose any of the fry which are growing very well and showing their
blue colours already.
© Copyright
1999-2003 Lisa Boorman
All Rights Reserved
Suggested Reading:
Malawi Cichlids in their natural
habitat - 2nd edition Ad Konings