Flowerhorns flowerhornfish flower horns big cichlids tank busters midas cichlids cichlasoma trifasciatum hualorhans luohans Kirin cichlids Luohan Hua lor han Penang, Malaysia hybrids american cichlid genera, Amphilophus, Nandopsis Vieja species A. citrinellum midas cichlid A. labiatum red devil Amphilophus festae red terror Geophagus brasiliensis pearl cichlid V. synspilum Vieja maculicauda black belt morphological characters hybrid fish exhibition development treatment diseases care taxonomy morphology Jing Kang
Double Flowering is my favorite thing to find. Like going to sites and poking around the smaller fish for ones like this, with red in the fins (rare) plus double flowers.
Above: An awesome double flowered Red Dragon
Double Flowering is simply the presence of a second flower behind the usual Flower you see back from the fishes' head.
Double Flowering is rare.
Above: An awesome double flowered Blue Dragon
There's another rarity you will see from time to time called Dragon's Tear and it's a black spot under the eye, and should be ring'd in electric blue. Very sweet to see. Buy it when found.
"Dragon's Tear"
For more information on judging or buying good Flowerhorns, click here.
Flowerhorns have the following advantages over other cichlids:
They are relatively gentle with unrelated species. I've kept my Flowerhorn "Bebe" with small gold barbs, Leporinus and Cory catfish.
Flowerhorns are more colorful than many more common species of cichlid.
Most importantly, no two Flowerhorns will be identical. You could own a Texas Cichlid for example, but someone else will have one just like yours.
They readily accept pelleted foods so you don't have to cannibalize goldfish or guppies. This makes your fish healthier because they don't catch diseases from their food. Easier, too, to keep a can of pellets than a fishtank of live food.
They max out at thirteen to fourteen inches so they're comfortable in the common 55 and 75 gallon tanks.
Cool: You can usually tell when they're "young" if they will be quality or not.
This young fish at right is 2.5 inches long and already shows three of the most important Flowerfish traits; the start of a hump on its nape, a robust red color and a nice row of flowers on the sides. Interestingly, in the smaller sizes, Flowerhorns aren't very aggressive to each other.
The fish at right sold for under $300 - it's a double flowered Red Dragon with a great hump, red eyes, lyre shaped fins, and red in the fins like you see on champions.
The fish at right sold for under $300 too. It's amazing because it combines finnage, red eyes, electric blue and the start of double flowering. It's gone, so stop drooling.
If you want to buy Flowerhorns at reasonable prices, and you don't want to speculate on risky "hope they arrive alive" overseas purchases, you should buy from a North American vendor. There are vendors here in the states who sell excellent quality fish.
NOTE
This site does NOT endorse the breeding of any Flowerhorns with missing parts. Tail-less Flowerhorns are, in our opinion, the propagation of a regrettable mutation which materially affects the fish the defect is found in. I do not recommend the purchase of any fish which was bred for missing anatomy.
Other OutBound Links
Please visit the following new, useful & informative web sites! KoiLab.com - Research facilities of Dr. Erik Johnson Koinews.com - News from the Koi World KoiClassifieds.com - Low listing costs! Koivet.com - Dr. Johnson's mega health site.
Valuable Treatment Resources:
Tricide Neo - Fight infections, easier than injections. Pondrx.com - Every medication complete with usage guides written by Dr. Erik Johnson. Medicated Food - Now! Two kinds, available overnight. Prazi- Bulk praziquantel for Fluke control.