Tilapia
Tilapia Tilapia is a large cichlid genus that contains
more than 100 species. They are naturally found in Africa and in
the Levant region in the Middle East. They are today present in
a large amount of waters around the world as a result of Tilapia
farming around the world. Tilapia farming has been an important
food source in some areas for more than 2500 years.
Tilapia is especially well suited for farming since they are
fast growing and hardy. This has made Tilapia a very important
protein source in some poor areas. Tilapias did as an example
play a very important role for the survival of the people in
Taiwan after World War 2. Many hope that Tilapia farming will be
able to play an equal large role in ending hunger in poor areas
today. The most common Tilapias in tilapia farms are not really
Tilapias but rather fish of the genus Oreochromis. The genus
Oreochromis and Sarotherodon are called Tilapia in many
languages including English but are not tilapias in the true
sense since they don't belong to the genus Tilapia. This said,
true tilapia fish are appreciated food fish in many countries.
The food values of Tilapia fish have meant that they have been
introduced to many waters around the world. They have
established themselves in even more areas after escaping from
farms. Tilapia cichlids can establish strong population in a
very short time span if the conditions are right and many
biologists fear what these newly established populations can do
to the native fishes in the area. The fear is especially large
in florid where the fish now is prohibited as a result of
several populations establishing themselves in the state.
Australia is another area that are especially sensitive to the
intrusions of these fish and are already suffering from the
effects of many other species that have established themselves
on the continent.
But that's enough general information about Tilapia cichlids.
Tilapia are easy to keep in aquariums if you can offer them an
aquarium that are large enough for them, The smaller Tilapia
species requires an aquarium of at least 40 gallon / 150 L while
the larger species requires an aquarium of at least 70 gallon /
250 L. They prefer slightly basic water but can without any
problem be kept in water with a pH of 6-8.5. Some Tilapia
species are aggressive while other is rather friendly. They are
best kept with moderate aggressive fish of similar size. Don't
keep them with fish that are unable to stand their ground
against the Tilapias. Suitable companions include
non-territorial cichlids, large catfish, garpikes and tinfoil
barbs. Most pleco type catfish are also suitable companions.
The aquarium should be decorated with a rocks and plants. The
bottom is best covered with relatively fine gravel and some flat
rocks. Tilapia cichlids should not be kept with sensitive plant
species but rather with hardier species like Anubias, Amazon
swordplants, crinum and java fern.
They are very easy to feed and will accept just about anything
you feed them. They can without problem be kept on a diet of
pellets but it is preferable to give them a more varied diet
that includes vegetables. This said, Tilapia can be kept and
breed on nothing but pellets and will usually do very well on
that diet.
Some tilapia species are mouth brooders while many other
species are substrate spawners that lay their eggs on a flat
rock or in a pit they dug. Many true Tilapia species are quite
productive since the survival rate of the fry is low in their
natural habitat. Oreochromis species are mouth brooders and
usually produce quite small fry batches. They are very easy to
breed and will breed without that any special consideration
needs to be taken. The fry of these species will have to be
removed once the female finally released them since they will
have a very low survival rate if they are left in the same
aquarium as their parents. Oreochromis species are best breed in
harem groups.
Substrate breeding tilapias protect their eggs and fry during
the first few weeks. All tilapia fry can be feed newly hatched
brine shrimp from day one and the fry of many species are large
enough to accept mashed pellets. It can sometimes be hard to
find new homes for Tilapia fry so you might want to take this
aspect into consideration when you decide how many fry to raise.