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| color = pink
| color = pink
| name = Shell dwellers
| name = Shell dwellers
| image = Lamprologusstappersimalemcl.jpg
| image_caption = ''[[Lamprologus stappersi]]''
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]

Revision as of 16:49, 12 August 2006

Shell dwellers
Lamprologus stappersi
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Subfamily:
Genera

Altolamprologus - A few varieties
Lamprologus
Lepidiolamprologus - May be invalid
Neolamprologus
Telmatochromis
Pseudotropheus - P. lanisticola

Shell dwellers are a group of cichlids from Lake Tanganyika with one definite example from Lake Malawi. The shell-dwelling species are marked out by their choice of shelter and breeding caves. Because Lake Tanganyika has very hard, alkaline water, the empty shells of long-deceased snails of the genus Neothauma do not dissolve, and have built up over millions of years to litter the lake floor.

Over time about 20 of the lake's many cichlid species have adapted to use these abandoned shells for safety and breeding. The species are some of the smallest in the cichlid world, some as small as ca. 3 cm, although males of one species, Neolamprologus callipterus, can reach ten times that size.

The fish are varied in shape from the laterally compressed, as with a variety of Altolamprologus compressiceps that has become small and shell-dwelling, to the elongated, as with shell-dwelling varieties of Telmatochromis. Most species fall between those two extremes, as with the species currently assigned to the Lamprologus and Neolamprologus genera which shell-dwell.

Shell dwellers are of little interest beyond the aquarium hobby, but within it they are valued for their intelligence and compact size.

Types of shell dwellers

There are several groups the shell dwellers can be placed into:

Range

Shell dwellers are found throughout Lake Tanganyika, along the coasts of Zambia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi and Tanzania.

Diet

Shell dwellers are carnivores that promarily feed on zooplankton and other microscopic and near-microscopic foods.

Cichlids' distinctive pharyngeal teeth, in the throat of the fish, are present in shell dwellers, though small. Armed with those and the usual teeth along with the typical dissolving qualities of water shell dwellers can eat a variety of foods in the wild and in captivity. Many species have been known to pull small snails from their shells to eat, to catch and devour the fry of other fish, and to go after small crustaceans.

A shell-dwelling male Lamprologus stappersi displays his dominance.

Reproduction

As with other cichlids they protect their young, and the distinctive shell-dwelling provides them with a defensible nursery.

Generally eggs are laid by the female within the shell and fertilized as she lays them or immediately after by the male.

The female will protect the shell, fanning her pectoral fins to keep the internal water oxygenated, and often rearranging the substrate to create barriers or to hide the shell from predators.

Eggs hatch within 48 hours, dependent primarily on temperature, and the yolk sac is absorbed within five days. Fry typically emerge from the shell a week after spawning, although they remain quite benthic for days or weeks after their emergence.

Shell dwellers as aquarium fish

The Malawi shell dweller, Pseudotropheus lanisticola, was first identified in 1964 along with many other mbuna in that lake, but the Tanganyikan shell dwellers were found primarily in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Altolamprologus compressiceps was identified in 1958 but the shell-dwelling varieties were found much later.

The shell-dwelling species' needs are very similar. The basic aquarium setup and equipment are appropriate with a few changes. First, the substrate should be sand. Many of the species are very accomplished diggers and for security may bury all or part of a shell, use sand as a territorial barrier, or generally amuse the owner by spitting, sifting, or throwing it. Second, hard, alkaline water must be provided, which should also be kept free of ammonia and nitrites and with low nitrates. Finally, appropriate shells must be provided. Common shells used for shell dwellers include authentic Neothauma shells, ocean turbo shells, escargot shells, whale eye shells, and Ampullariidae-family shells. Shells must be of an appropriate size for the species, have a round opening, and have open coils. Numbers of shells will vary; for colonial species, hundreds may be ideal. For brevis types, a single shell per pair is often representative.

Cichlids