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Elliott's Cichlid

Thorichthys maculipinnis

The peaceful jewel of Central America (formerly T. ellioti). A close cousin of the Firemouth cichlid, sporting a pink belly and stunning neon blue spangles. Settles disputes by harmlessly puffing out its gills.

Family
Cichlidae
Origin
Centro America (Messico orientale, bacino del Rio Papaloapan)
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

23 °C - 28 °C

pH

7 - 8

Water type

Freshwater

Tank level

Bottom and middle

Adult size

15 cm

Description

Geographic Origin and Biotope: Endemic to the slow-moving rivers, lakes, and swamps of the Rio Papaloapan basin in eastern Mexico. Inhabits shallow sandy banks covered in fallen branches, roots, and dense leaf litter.

Taxonomy and Morphology: Thorichthys genus (15 cm max). A close, much more colorful relative of the famous Firemouth Cichlid. Features a tall body, a narrow pointed mouth perfectly designed for sifting sand, and elegant, trailing pointed fins.

Social Behavior: A Central American rarity: mostly PEACEFUL and even gregarious outside of breeding. Rather than tearing each other apart, rival males engage in spectacular 'Gill-flaring'. They face off, push their gill membranes forward (displaying large false black eye-spots) to look monstrously huge, and back down without biting. Relentless sand excavators.

Coloration and Sexual Dimorphism: Breathtaking. The entire flank is heavily dusted with iridescent turquoise/neon blue spangles over a gold/tan base. Throat and belly glow pastel pink/red. Distinctive black spots (ocelli) on the mid-flank and gill plates. Females are slightly smaller and exhibit a unique dark blotch on the dorsal fin.

Care and observations

Tank Setup: A moderate-sized cichlid needing a 200-250+ liter tank (120 cm). FINE SAND IS MANDATORY (they constantly sift it for food). Decorate heavily with smooth flat stones, driftwood, and dried leaf litter. Tough plants (Crypts, Amazon Swords) work, but weak-rooted plants will be constantly uprooted by their digging.

Feeding: Omnivorous benthic earth-eater. Not an active hunter; feeds by blowing into the sand to unearth insects and detritus. Readily accepts sinking pellets, bloodworms, daphnia. MUST have a good 30-40% green diet (Spirulina wafers) to prevent bloat. Without sand to sift, they suffer severe psychological stress.

Water Quality: Hardy, preferring classic Mexican river water: medium to hard GH, alkaline pH 7.0-8.0 (avoid peat or acidic setups). 25-28°C. Sensitive to high nitrates, leading to sensory pore infections.

Compatibility: Excellent centerpiece for a peaceful Central American community. Good with large livebearers (Swordtails, Sailfin Mollies), robust Tetras, and Plecos. MUST NOT be housed with standard large aggressive cichlids (Midas, Jack Dempsey, Green Terror) as they will be intimidated, beaten, and killed.

Reproduction: Easy and highly rewarding. Monogamous pairs lay 100-300 eggs on a meticulously cleaned flat rock inside a large sand crater. Beautiful biparental care: they chew up food and spit the 'dust' into the cloud of fry, aggressively puffing their gills at any intruder.

Risks: 1. Hole-in-the-Head (HITH) disease from poor water quality (high nitrates). 2. Fatal mouth/gill abrasions if kept on sharp or coarse gravel. 3. Beaten to death if mixed with aggressive 'bruiser' cichlids.

Fish profile

Tank level
Bottom and middle
Adult size
15 cm
GH
10 dGH - 20 dGH
KH
n/a
TDS
n/a
Conductivity
n/a

Image gallery

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