Back to catalog
FishFreshwaterEasy

Curated catalog

Tuxedo Guppy

Poecilia reticulata var. Tuxedo

Evening elegance in miniature: the rear half of the body is wrapped in a dark mantle — black, blue, or purple — dramatically contrasting with the lighter front. The fan tail can be red, blue, yellow, or multicolored. The 'Tuxedo' name perfectly describes the visual effect: it looks like it's wearing a dinner jacket. A hardy and prolific variety, ideal for those wanting a high-impact aquarium with minimal maintenance.

Family
Poeciliidae
Origin
Allevamento selettivo
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

22 °C - 28 °C

pH

6.8 - 8.5

Water type

Freshwater

Tank level

Zona intermedia e superiore

Adult size

5 cm

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

The Tuxedo Guppy is a spectacular, entirely captive-bred ornamental strain derived from wild Poecilia reticulata lines natively endemic to the slow-moving freshwater rivers, estuaries, and warm, vegetated pools of South America and the Caribbean. While wild guppies inhabit murky shallows, the captive "biotope" for this highly refined, delicate strain requires a pristine, mature aquarium characterized by dense thickets of aquatic plants, floating vegetation, and immaculate water quality to protect their massive, flowing fins from necrosis.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Poeciliidae family, the Tuxedo Guppy is a stunning example of meticulous, multi-generational selective breeding. Morphologically, they are small, streamlined micro-predators. Mature females reach roughly 5.0 to 6.0 centimeters (2.0-2.4 inches), while the highly ornamented males remain smaller at 2.5 to 3.5 centimeters (1.0-1.4 inches). The "Tuxedo" trait is a specific genetic mutation characterized by a completely solid, stark dark coloration (usually deep black or navy blue) covering the entire rear half of the body.

Social Behavior:

They are highly intelligent, incredibly hyperactive, and intensely social mid-to-top-dwelling community fish. They are completely peaceful toward other species but exhibit a frenetic, non-stop mating and chasing behavior within their own kind. They absolutely MUST be kept in a sizable shoal (minimum 6 individuals). Because males are relentless in their pursuit of mating, it is an unconditional, absolute requirement to maintain a strict ratio of at least two (preferably three) females for every one male to disperse the constant, exhausting harassment.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is absolute, extreme, and unmistakable. Mature females are vastly larger, heavier-bodied, generally display a duller base coloration (though the tuxedo half-black trait is often visible on females), and exhibit a distinct dark "gravid spot." Mature males are vastly smaller, possess a modified anal fin (the gonopodium), and boast breathtaking colors. The male Tuxedo Guppy features a striking "half-black" body contrasting violently with a brilliant, saturated neon tail (often red, yellow, or blue), resembling a tuxedo suit.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly accommodate their highly active swimming nature and provide massive physical barriers to break line-of-sight during mating chases. A minimum 40-liter (10-gallon) tank is required for a small harem. The absolute most critical requirement is overwhelming plant cover; the tank MUST feature massive thickets of tall, stem plants (like Water Sprite) and specifically, dense carpets of floating plants (like Salvinia or Hornwort) which are unconditionally mandatory to provide a secure refuge for exhausted females and newborn fry.

Diet & Feeding:

They are highly active, voracious omnivores and natural micro-predators. In the aquarium, their diet is notoriously easy but MUST be comprehensive and balanced. They strictly MUST be fed a high-quality mix of protein and vegetable matter. Daily offerings of premium micro-pellets, crushed tropical flakes, freeze-dried tubifex, and specifically, live or frozen meaty foods (bloodworms, daphnia, brine shrimp) are unconditionally mandatory for vibrant coloration, long-term health, and robust fry development.

Water Quality:

They strictly demand highly oxygenated, warm tropical heat (24-28°C / 75-82°F). Crucially, while wild guppies are adaptable, highly inbred ornamental strains like the Tuxedo Guppy absolutely require moderately hard, heavily mineralized water (GH 8-15) and a neutral to slightly alkaline pH (7.0 - 8.0) to truly thrive, maintain their immune system, and prevent severe osmotic stress. They are highly sensitive to Ammonia and Nitrites; a highly mature filter and rigorous weekly 25-30% water changes are unconditionally mandatory to prevent fin rot.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is excellent due to their completely peaceful nature, but their massive, flowing fins make them highly vulnerable targets. They are the perfect centerpiece for a peaceful community aquarium. They MUST NEVER be housed with aggressive fin-nippers (like Tiger Barbs or Serpae Tetras) or large, fast predatory fish (like Angelfish, Cichlids, or Gouramis) that will violently shred their massive tails and hunt them. Excellent companions include peaceful bottom-dwellers (Corydoras, Kuhli Loaches), Otocinclus, and peaceful dwarf shrimp.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is spectacularly prolific, incredibly fast, and virtually unstoppable. They are livebearers; they do NOT lay eggs. Following internal fertilization, the female will gestate for roughly 21-30 days, evidenced by a massively swelling belly and a darkening gravid spot. She will then give live birth to 20-50 fully formed, free-swimming fry. The adults are completely devoid of parental care and are aggressively cannibalistic; massive, impenetrable thickets of floating plants are absolutely mandatory to ensure the fry survive.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is rapid, lethal toxicity from Ammonia/Nitrite spikes in overcrowded tanks (as they breed exponentially). The second major risk is lethal exhaustion; failing to maintain the strict 2:1 female-to-male ratio will inevitably result in the females being chased to death by the relentless males. Finally, their massive, flowing tails are highly susceptible to fin rot (caused by poor water quality) and physical shredding by aggressive tankmates or sharp, jagged plastic decorations.

Fish profile

Temperament
Pacifico e attivo
Diet
Onnivoro: fiocchi, micro-pellet, artemia, dafnia, spirulina
Tank level
Zona intermedia e superiore
Minimum group
3
Adult size
5 cm
Minimum tank
40 L
GH
8 dGH - 28 dGH
KH
n/a
TDS
n/a
Conductivity
n/a
Sex ratio
1 maschio : 2–3 femmine
Feeding frequency
1–2 volte al giorno
Bioload
Low
Flow
Corrente debole
Reproduction
Viviparo. Gestazione 4–6 settimane. Il gene Tuxedo è co-dominante.
Compatibility
Comunità pacifica: tetra, Corydoras, rasbore. Evitare mordipinne.

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Exact Wikimedia Commons file named TuxedoGuppy2 and categorized as halfblack Poecilia reticulata.

Exact Wikimedia Commons file named TuxedoGuppy and categorized as halfblack Poecilia reticulata.