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How to breed Mikrogeophagus ramirezi

John Rundle has some advice on breeding the Ram, Mikrogeophagus ramirezi.

How to breed Mikrogeophagus ramirezi

Copyright © Practical Fishkeeping


When visiting a new fish shop in my area my attention was drawn to a tank of fish that were shining like brightly coloured butterflies.

Mikrogeophagus ramirezi, commonly known as the Ram or the Butterfly cichlid, comes from Venezuela and Colombia and reaches around 7cm/23/4”. When I first started breeding fish the Ram was considered difficult to breed. Now if you can supply them with fairly soft water you can breed them without too many problems.

Since its introduction into the hobby in about 1948 the Ram has been bred and developed by commercial fish breeders in a variety of shapes and colours including gold, long-finned and albino.

Sexing
The Rams I bred were young adults. I was told that they were German bred; they had brilliant normal colour, normal shaped fins and were in excellent condition. Because of these facts, I decided to buy two males and three females.

Female Rams are smaller than the males and the second ray of the dorsal fin is shorter. The male dorsal ray extensions (third and fourth rays) are longer than the female’s. When in breeding condition, the female’s belly area will be a brilliant red in normal coloured fish.

Water
Aquarium literature cites that the Ram should be kept and bred in water that is acidic and soft. This would be best if you have wild stock, but fish from commercial stock will do well in water with a neutral pH of 7, moderately soft 3 to 6 GH. However, it will not do well in hard water.

In my case I have tapwater that is neutral pH and very soft, which is ideal for keeping Rams.

Conditioning
The five Rams were housed in a 76 x 30 x 30cm/30” x 12” x 12” tank along with six Rosy tetras. The tank had no substrate, but there were groups of Java fern and small clay plant pots laid on their sides to provide shelter. The temperature was set at 26ºC/78ºF and filtration was a homemade gravel filter.

The fish were fed a diet of dry foods, frozen bloodworm and live foods such as grindalworm and whiteworm. On this varied diet I hoped they would come into breeding condition and start to form pairs through natural selection. I didn’t have long to wait...

One morning I went to feed the fish and noticed something was going on; a male and female Ram were being very active over the top of one of the plant pots at one end of the tank. All the other fish, including the tetras, were at the opposite end of the tank, well away from the Rams.

On closer inspection I could see the male guarding a large batch of amber coloured eggs that were placed on the plant pot. I decided to leave the situation as it was and allow the pair to guard their eggs. They did very well and within eight days there was a large brood of about 200 tiny fry free swimming around the proud parents who still kept the other tank inmates at bay.

Rams can become unsure and panic and then eat their young, so need peace and quiet when they have eggs and fry. That’s what happened in this case as I think they felt insecure with the other fish in the tank and devoured the fry – I know because I watched them.

Breeding
My next move was to set up a 60 x 25 x 25cm/24” x 10” x 10” tank with a mono-layer of aquarium gravel, plants such as Java fern and Java moss, flat stones, small clay flower pots and a sponge type filter. A heaterstat was added set to 27ºC/80ºF and there was no overhead tank lighting, just daylight from a nearby window.

Into this tank the pair of Rams that had previously spawned were placed and fed the same diet as before. The tank was the uppermost in a bank of four – I thought that this would allow the pair seclusion from seeing me pass by
each day.

Within a few days the pair began to clean a flat stone and I could clearly see the genital papilla (the tube extending from the urogential opening, used for egg or sperm deposition) on each fish starting to show.

On the female it was smaller and more rounded than the male. The colours at this time were brilliant on the male and the female, as they showed off to each other and prepared to breed.

I was able to watch them breed, with the female passing over the stone and laying a few eggs. The male would follow closely behind to fertilise them. This action continued until there were about 200 amber coloured eggs on the stone.

Fry care
The Ram is monogamous, with the care of eggs and fry shared by both parents. In four days they were a wriggling mass. I did panic on the fifth day when I peeped into the tank – the stone was bare, no mass of hatching eggs and no parents!

On closer inspection, there in one of the plant pots that was turned on its side was the male and the tiny wriggling larvae.

Within another four days the male was seen swimming with a large brood of very tiny free-swimming fry all around him. The female was close by and lost no time in coming to the front glass to tell me to go away!

The fry appeared to be smaller than other dwarf cichlids I have bred and I wondered if they would take brineshrimp nauplii for their first food.

I use San Francisco strain brineshrimp which produces smaller nauplii than the Utah strain, so I decided to try it for their first feed. I had no need to worry for they were soon seen feeding on the brineshrimp with the parent still in attendance.

Within another week I was feeding brineshrimp nauplii, microworm, and a ZM fry food called ZM-000 which is 30-90 microns in size and ideal for tiny fry.

When the fry were three weeks old, I removed the parents as I was concerned they would take fright again and eat the brood. After another two weeks I carefully moved the whole brood from the breeding tank into two 60 x 30 x 30cm/24” x 12” x 12” bare set-up tanks to grow on.

Baby Rams look nothing like their attractive parents and indeed have no sign of colour until they are about 12mm long.

This article was first published in the October 2006 issue of Practical Fishkeeping. It may not be reproduced without permission.



iconJohn Rundle 1095 (words, 15636 hits)
Published online: 04.27.09

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Reader comment

"You fail to mention the hard part about breeding Rams. Getting a decent pair - 99% of the Rams in UKL shops are hormonally treated, single sex (usually male but never mixed) junk from the far east. Oh and the wholesalers have learnt to call them "German" or Dutch Rams as they sell better."

Posted by: David Johnson - 6 months, 3 weeks ago
Date: Thursday April 30th, 2009, 6:33 pmReport post
Reader comment

"They are really good fish but I've had problems too with them being rather short lived, they seem to be fine for about 6 to 9 months and then they quickly fade away stop eating and die. They have spawned a few times but the fry end up as corydoras food.

One day I'd like to keep a biotope tank just for them with lots of floorspace something like 2 square meters and it would be interesting to watch the behaviour in larger groups.

I think I read something about in the wild they are fairly densely populated, is this true John?"

Posted by: Sam Sharpe - 6 months, 1 week ago
Date: Friday May 15th, 2009, 5:20 pmReport post
Reader comment

"The Blue Ram is my favourite fish. I have bred them over six generations of brother and sister and i always try to have one pair in my tank. The best Blue Rams come from the Czech Republic (East European)
"

Posted by: Stephen Cordy - 6 months, 1 week ago
Date: Sunday May 17th, 2009, 8:15 pmReport post
Reader comment

"Just to let folks know, my lfs, Riverside Aquatics in Nairn, Inverness-shire and also in Sterling, often has a good supply of good quality German Rams of both sexes.

Often they are the balloon type shape but, once my tank is cycled, I'll be checking every couple of days until he gets the normal body shaped ones in.

I hadn't considered breeding them, just desperate to get a pair as I had them a few years ago and they were great characters. Did everything together, never saw one without the other at it's side. Very community freindly, even to the point of looking quite depressed when their betta friend got ill.

Amazing flourescent blue colours round the head and reflective scales that seem to change colour at different viewing angles.

I would highly recommend them if you can get quality stock."

Posted by: Alan Hutchison - 5 months, 4 weeks ago
Date: Tuesday May 26th, 2009, 4:21 pmReport post
Reader comment

"It's highly unlikely that Balloon Rams would be true German Blue Rams (i.e. bred in germany). The deformed fish sold as balloon or longfinned rams are mass produced in the far east and are generally the worst quality in terms of health and hormonal treatment. Poor quality does NOT mean poor colours (far east rams often look more beautiful than wild rams or true east euro rams because they are hormonally fed). As I said, at some point in the supply chain far east rams are labelled as German/Dutch or Chech. It's completely legal, you could name a fish a Ram from Mars legally."

Posted by: David Johnson - 5 months, 3 weeks ago
Date: Tuesday June 2nd, 2009, 5:16 pmReport post
Reader comment

"i have 4 balloon rams and they are fab little guys i would say these are far most the best tropical fish i have almost looking like marine fish with their lovely florescent colors , they are from a great little garden center which also has a great fish show room and the staff are very helpful , im even considering having more as they have just had a batch of youngsters in "

Posted by: Stephanie Gawronska - 5 months, 2 weeks ago
Date: Tuesday June 9th, 2009, 6:47 pmReport post
Reader comment

"I've given up on rams despite having ideal water parameters as stipulated above in which my sturisoma panamense regulalry spawn they don't last more than a couple of weeks despite feeding well they just whither away and die.

I'm going to opt for the african butterfly cichlid Anomalochromis thomasi from now on much tougher."

Posted by: Alan James - 5 months, 1 week ago
Date: Thursday June 11th, 2009, 11:04 amReport post
Reader comment

"Any one know what the name of the plant is in the picture above the article?"

Posted by: Derek Linhares - 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Date: Thursday July 2nd, 2009, 6:52 amReport post
Reader comment

"Ramirezi is one of the popular tropical fish in Korea, too. I attempted to breed Golden Ramirezi though I failed..,"

Posted by: Su-jin Lee - 2 months, 3 weeks ago
Date: Wednesday August 26th, 2009, 9:40 amReport post
Reader comment

"I have F1 rams breeding - parents were South American imports, great fish, I am producing hundreds and they are great, well coloured, easy hand feeders, spawning at 3 months, can't stop them. But the shops (not all of them) can get cheap weedy imports for £1 a fish and have little interest in quality - these are the fish that don't live very long and don't spawn successfully. Look for quality fish, it's cheaper in the long run and more rewarding."

Posted by: Anne Skinner - 2 months, 1 week ago
Date: Wednesday September 9th, 2009, 3:49 pmReport post
Reader comment

"In Response to Derek Linhares......I think the plant in the above pic is Cabomba......hard to tell for certain thought as not a lot of it visible."

Posted by: Rob Fall - 1 month ago
Date: Tuesday October 20th, 2009, 2:15 pmReport post

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About the author: John Rundle

John Rundle

John Rundle is one of the UK's top amateur fish breeders. He is the author of a number of books on fish breeding, livebearers and the preparation and production of live foods for aquarium fishes. John works for Plymouth University where he is currently involved in breeding cephalopods.

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