Generated via Deepmind Antigravity AI
Curated catalog
Red-striped killifish
Aphyosemion striatum
Among Africa's most colorful killifish and one of the best for beginners: males display orderly rows of red dots on a blue-green base creating a unique horizontal stripe effect. Native to Gabon and Equatorial Guinea, it is a 'guaranteed' breeder according to enthusiasts — laying eggs daily in small batches on mops or moss. Despite its peaceful appearance, it can be a fin-nipper: best in a species-only tank. Average lifespan 2–5 years; does not tolerate high temperatures above 25 °C well.
- Family
- Nothobranchiidae
- Origin
- Gabun
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
21 °C - 26 °C
5.5 - 6.5
Freshwater
Zona intermedia e superiore
6 cm
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic to the lush, equatorial rainforests of West-Central Africa, specifically restricted to the coastal plains of Equatorial Guinea and northern Gabon. Aphyosemion striatum (the Red-striped Killi) is a highly specialized micro-predator. It naturally colonizes extremely shallow, stagnant, tannin-rich blackwater pools, swamps, and heavily shaded, slow-moving forest streams completely choked with dense marginal vegetation, fallen branches, and massive accumulations of decaying leaf litter.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Nothobranchiidae family, it belongs to the complex group of African non-annual killifish (living for several years, with eggs that incubate entirely underwater). Taxonomically, its specific name "striatum" translates to "striped," directly referencing the defining parallel red lines running down its flanks. Morphologically, it possesses a slender, cylindrical body, a flat head, and an upward-pointing mouth perfectly adapted for hunting at the water's surface.
Social Behavior:
It is a relatively peaceful, highly localized, and visually-oriented surface dweller. While males will exhibit spectacular, ritualistic territorial displays toward one another—flaring their massive fins and intensifying their colors—they rarely cause actual physical harm if adequate space is provided. They do not school; instead, they establish loose territories. They spend the vast majority of their time hovering motionless just below the water surface, waiting to ambush insects.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is absolute and visually extreme. Females are plain, pale beige or muted olive, completely lacking the intense coloration of the males. Males, however, are breathtaking aquatic jewels. The male’s body is a canvas of iridescent metallic blue-green, horizontally slashed with 4 to 5 intense, perfectly parallel blood-red stripes. His massive, extended dorsal, anal, and caudal fins mirror this pattern, heavily streaked with intense red, blue, and vivid yellow edges.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture must meticulously replicate a dark, overgrown West African jungle pool. A dark, tannin-stained environment is absolute mandatory to reduce stress and unlock the male's blazing colors. The tank must feature heavily dimmed lighting, completely shielded by a thick canopy of floating plants (like Salvinia or Pistia). The substrate should be dark soil covered in a dense carpet of Indian Almond Leaves. Water flow must be virtually zero.
Diet & Feeding:
In their natural rainforest pools, they are strictly carnivorous micro-predators, launching themselves out of the water to catch low-flying insects or consuming mosquito larvae. In captivity, they heavily reject dry flakes and pellets. Their diet must consist almost entirely of live and frozen foods. They absolutely demand daily feedings of fruit flies (Drosophila), live daphnia, white worms, and frozen bloodworms to maintain optimal health and their intense red striping.
Water Quality:
Originating from isolated jungle swamps, they are highly specialized blackwater fish. They demand very warm tropical temperatures (24-28°C) and extremely soft, highly acidic water (pH 5.5 - 6.5) heavily saturated with botanical humic acids. Because they inhabit stagnant pools in nature, they have practically zero tolerance for strong filter currents; they require gentle sponge filtration. They are extremely sensitive to nitrate accumulation.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
They are peaceful but incredibly shy and easily outcompeted. Aphyosemion striatum should ideally be kept in a dedicated species-only setup (one male with 2-3 females). If a community tank is absolutely necessary, tankmates must be tiny, ultra-peaceful, and non-competitive for surface food (such as dwarf Rasboras or Otocinclus). Fast-moving tetras or aggressive surface feeders will cause the killifish to starve and hide permanently.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding is relatively straightforward for dedicated aquarists. They are continuous plant-spawners. Provide heavily conditioned adults with large clumps of Java Moss or artificial woolen spawning mops. Females will deposit a few sticky eggs daily among the fine threads. The parents generally do not eat the eggs if well-fed, but for maximum yield, the mops should be removed weekly and incubated in a separate shallow container. Fry require microscopic infusoria immediately.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is jumping. Because they naturally hunt insects above the water and migrate between puddles during the rainy season, they are elite, pinpoint jumpers. The aquarium must have an absolutely flawless, airtight lid; they will exploit a 1cm gap to leap to their deaths. Medically, they are highly prone to velvet disease (Oodinium) and fungal infections if kept in hard, alkaline water lacking protective botanical tannins.
Fish profile
- Temperament
- Generalmente pacifico ma può pizzicare le pinne; maschi aggressivi verso le femmine se in soprannumero. Tenere più femmine che maschi
- Diet
- Carnivoro: artemia, dafnia, micro-vermi e chironomus vivi o surgelati. Accetta fiocchi di qualità, ma il cibo vivo migliora salute e colori
- Tank level
- Zona intermedia e superiore
- Minimum group
- 3
- Adult size
- 6 cm
- Minimum tank
- 30 L
- GH
- 7 dGH - 14 dGH
- KH
- n/a
- TDS
- n/a
- Conductivity
- n/a
- Feeding frequency
- 2 volte al giorno in piccole dosi
- Bioload
- Very low
- Flow
- Corrente molto debole
- Jump risk
- Covered tank required
- Reproduction
- Depositore non annuale su mop o muschio. Depone uova quotidianamente in piccoli lotti. Raccogliere uova o mop settimanalmente per incubazione separata. Avannotti in grado di mangiare nauplii di artemia e micro-vermi subito dopo la schiusa.
- Compatibility
- Meglio in vasca monospecifica a causa della tendenza al fin-nipping. Se in comunità, solo con pesci robusti e senza pinne lunghe. Rapporto 1 maschio per 2–3 femmine.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Representative live aquarium/natural image from Aphyosemion australe (same genus) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Aphyosemion striatum.