Generated via Deepmind Antigravity AI
Curated catalog
Egger's killifish
Nothobranchius eggersi
An annual killifish from Tanzania with a compact body and spectacular livery: the male is an explosion of red, orange and blue on a body of just 5 cm. An 'annual' species — in nature it lives only during the rainy season and dies when pools dry up. The eggs survive in dry mud for months in embryonic diapause, ready to hatch when water returns. In captivity: longevity ~1 year. Requires the complete cycle of egg collection, dry incubation and rehydration to maintain the population. Live or frozen food essential.
- Family
- Nothobranchiidae
- Origin
- Tansania
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
21 °C - 30 °C
7 - 8.2
Freshwater
Zona intermedia e inferiore
5 cm
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic exclusively to an incredibly restricted, harsh, and highly temporary geographical range within the lower Rufiji River basin in eastern Tanzania, East Africa. Nothobranchius eggersi (universally known as Egger's Killifish) natively colonizes shallow, ephemeral (temporary) rain pools, completely stagnant swamps, and muddy depressions that form only during the intense monsoon season. These micro-habitats are completely isolated, highly turbid (muddy), lack submerged vegetation, and—crucially—dry up entirely, turning into baked mud during the brutal dry season.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Nothobranchiidae family, it is an astonishingly unique, breathtakingly colored, and highly specialized "annual" killifish. Morphologically, fully mature adult males reach roughly 4.5 to 5.0 centimeters (1.8-2.0 inches) in length, while females are significantly smaller and plumper. It possesses a deeply robust, heavily compressed, compact, and somewhat "stubby" body profile. Its absolute defining anatomical feature is an exceptionally large, rounded dorsal fin and a massive, fan-like caudal (tail) fin designed for sudden bursts of speed.
Social Behavior:
They are highly active, intensely driven, and strictly temporary bottom-dwelling fish. They possess an incredibly accelerated life cycle (often living only 6-9 months total). Because they are locked in a desperate race against the drying pool, their entire existence is hyper-focused on feeding and relentless, continuous spawning. Males are intensely territorial and hyper-aggressive toward other males, constantly flaring and sparring. They are best kept in a specialized "harem" setup: one spectacular male housed with 3 to 4 females to disperse his relentless breeding aggression.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is spectacular, massive, and absolute. Mature males are indisputably among the most brilliantly colored freshwater fish on Earth: their base body color is an intensely glowing, highly saturated turquoise or deep metallic blue. Their entire body is covered in a spectacular, dense checkerboard pattern of bright, blood-red spots. The dorsal, anal, and massive tail fins are heavily flushed with bright crimson and starkly bordered by a brilliant neon-white or sky-blue margin. Females are completely devoid of color, exhibiting a plain, pale grey-brown.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly accommodate their unique breeding biology and aggressive nature. A minimum 40-liter (10-gallon) dedicated species tank is required for a single male and his harem. The tank MUST feature significant line-of-sight breaks (like dense thickets of Java Fern or small driftwood) so females can escape the male's relentless pursuit. Crucially, because they are substrate spawners, the bottom MUST be covered in a deep layer of extremely soft, fine peat moss or specialized spawning coir, which is essential for collecting and preserving their eggs.
Diet & Feeding:
They are highly specialized, intensely voracious micro-predators (carnivores) with an incredibly rapid metabolism (driven by their short annual lifespan). They are notoriously picky and will frequently reject commercial dry flakes or pellets completely. You MUST feed them a heavily varied, high-protein diet to fuel their relentless spawning. Daily, heavy offerings of live or high-quality frozen foods are absolutely mandatory: massive amounts of bloodworms, Daphnia, Artemia (brine shrimp), and mosquito larvae. Malnutrition will quickly halt breeding and lead to premature death.
Water Quality:
Originating from temporary African rain pools, they possess water requirements that differ completely from typical community fish. They thrive in warm tropical temperatures (24-28°C / 75-82°F). Crucially, they demand moderately soft to moderately hard water (GH 4-12) and a slightly acidic to neutral pH (6.5 - 7.5). They possess absolute zero tolerance for dissolved organic waste; rigorous weekly water changes are mandatory. The water flow MUST be extremely gentle; strong currents will violently exhaust them and completely prevent them from performing their delicate substrate-spawning dives.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is virtually non-existent for standard community setups. Due to their incredibly short lifespan, intense male-on-male aggression, hyper-aggressive breeding behavior, and specific requirement for peat substrate, they MUST be kept exclusively in a dedicated, single-species breeding tank. They are NOT community fish. Housing multiple males in a small tank will result in lethal, relentless combat until only one remains. They should be kept strictly as one male to a harem of 3-4 females.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding is the entire purpose of keeping this species. They are "annual" killifish; in the wild, the adults die when the pool dries, but the eggs survive encased in the baked mud for months. The male aggressively drives the female into the deep peat substrate, where they dive into the mud to deposit a single, hard-shelled egg. This occurs dozens of times daily. To hatch the fry, the aquarist MUST remove the peat, squeeze it damp-dry, seal it in a bag, and incubate it at room temperature for 3-4 months before re-wetting it to trigger explosive hatching.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is lethal exhaustion and stress to the females caused by the male's relentless, hyper-aggressive mating drive; housing a single female with a male will result in her rapid death. A harem is strictly mandatory. The second major risk is lethal Velvet Disease (Oodinium), to which Nothobranchius species are uniquely and severely susceptible; adding a small amount of aquarium salt to the water is highly recommended as a preventative measure. Finally, remember their lifespan is biologically fixed at roughly 6-12 months.
Fish profile
- Temperament
- Generalmente pacifico ma maschi territoriali tra loro. Vasca monospecifica consigliata
- Diet
- Micro-predatore: cibo vivo o surgelato essenziale — dafnia, artemia, chironomus, ciclopi. Accetta cibo secco di qualità ma non come unica fonte
- Tank level
- Zona intermedia e inferiore
- Minimum group
- 2
- Adult size
- 5 cm
- Minimum tank
- 20 L
- GH
- n/a
- KH
- n/a
- TDS
- n/a
- Conductivity
- n/a
- Feeding frequency
- 2 volte al giorno
- Bioload
- Low
- Flow
- Corrente debole
- Jump risk
- Covered tank required
- Reproduction
- Specie ANNUALE: ciclo obbligatorio. Deposizione su substrato di torba. Raccogliere torba con uova, strizzare, conservare in sacchetto umido a temperatura ambiente per 8–12 settimane (diapausa). Reidratare con acqua fresca per schiusa. Avannotti: nauplii di artemia immediati. Senza questo ciclo la popolazione si estingue.
- Compatibility
- Vasca monospecifica ideale. Evitare pesci competitivi per il cibo o che predano le uova nel substrato.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Nothobranchius eggersi.
Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Nothobranchius eggersi.
Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Nothobranchius eggersi.