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Curated catalog

Variable platy

Xiphophorus variatus

The quintessential 'subtropical' livebearer: tolerates low temperatures (16–25 °C) without a heater — ideal for unheated home tanks. Native to eastern Mexico. Available in many vivid color variants: red, orange, yellow, sunset, wagtail. Hardier and more adaptable than cousin X. maculatus. Omnivore that grazes algae and loves vegetable matter. Low temperatures slow the breeding cycle giving females 'rest'. Excellent for beginners.

Family
Poeciliidae
Origin
Mexiko
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

21 °C - 26 °C

pH

7 - 8.5

Water type

Freshwater

Tank level

Zona intermedia

Adult size

7 cm

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

Endemic exclusively to the fast-flowing, highly oxygenated, and remarkably cool-water highland streams, rocky mountain drainages, and clear coastal rivers of eastern Mexico (specifically Tamaulipas, Veracruz, and San Luis Potosí). Xiphophorus variatus (universally known as the Variatus Platy or Variable Platyfish) natively colonizes intensely clear, rocky-bottomed waterways. These specific micro-habitats are completely distinct from standard Platy swamps; they are characterized by swift currents, sparse aquatic vegetation, dense algae mats on smooth boulders, and significantly lower temperatures.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Poeciliidae family (the livebearers), it is a spectacularly robust, intensely colored, and biologically resilient cool-water fish. Morphologically, fully mature adult females reach roughly 6.0 to 7.0 centimeters (2.4-2.8 inches) in length, making them noticeably larger and significantly more elongated than the standard Maculatus Platy. It possesses a deeply streamlined, torpedo-shaped body profile evolved specifically for fighting fast mountain river currents, completely lacking the thick, stocky appearance of its swamp-dwelling cousin.

Social Behavior:

They are highly athletic, relentlessly active, and exceptionally peaceful livebearers. Due to their riverine origins, they possess a frantic, powerful swimming style, constantly fighting the currents and foraging along the substrate. They are deeply social and strictly MUST be kept in a sizable group (absolute minimum 5-6) with a strictly enforced gender ratio of at least 2 to 3 females per every single male. Like all livebearers, males spend their entire day relentlessly pursuing females in an exhaustingly constant attempt to copulate.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is absolute and critical. Mature males possess a sharply pointed, rod-like anal fin called a "gonopodium," used for internal fertilization, while females possess a standard, fan-shaped anal fin and massively plumper abdomens. The coloration of the Variatus Platy is legendary for its intense, multi-colored variability (hence "variatus"). Wild types and captive morphs feature a blinding, glowing neon-yellow or brilliant metallic blue base body, spectacularly contrasting against a massive, deeply saturated sunset-orange or vivid red tail fin.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly replicate a turbulent, clear, and cool-water Mexican highland stream. A minimum 80-liter (20-gallon) tank (at least 60 cm long) is strictly required to accommodate their larger size and highly athletic swimming speed. The absolute most critical requirement is powerful water flow and massive oxygenation via powerheads; they will be lethargic in stagnant water. The tank MUST feature smooth river stones, dense thickets of cold-tolerant plants (like Vallisneria), and massive open swimming spaces.

Diet & Feeding:

They are highly active, voracious omnivores that act as excellent scavengers and specialized algae grazers in fast currents. In the aquarium, they possess a massive appetite and will aggressively accept any commercial diet. However, to maintain perfect health, brilliant neon colors, and prevent severe digestive issues, their diet MUST be heavily skewed toward vegetable matter. Daily offerings of spirulina-based flakes or blanched vegetables (zucchini, peas) are strictly mandatory, supplemented 2-3 times a week with meaty foods (bloodworms, Artemia) for protein.

Water Quality:

Originating from pristine, roaring Mexican highland rivers, they possess one absolute, critical requirement: COOL WATER. They strictly demand sub-tropical to temperate conditions (20-24°C / 68-75°F). Keeping them in standard tropical heat (26°C+) will rapidly exhaust their metabolism, cause severe stress, and drastically shorten their lifespan. Crucially, they strictly require moderately hard to very hard water (GH 10-25) and a distinctly alkaline pH (7.2 - 8.2). Rigorous weekly water changes (30-50%) and high oxygenation are unconditionally mandatory.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is strictly limited by their absolute requirement for cool/cold, hard, alkaline water. They are the perfect, vibrant centerpiece for a peaceful, unheated temperate biotope. Excellent companions include fast-swimming, cool-water tolerant species: Zebra Danios, White Cloud Mountain Minnows, Weather Loaches, and cold-water tolerant Corydoras (C. paleatus). They MUST NEVER be housed with standard tropical fish (like Discus or Rams) due to completely incompatible temperature requirements, nor with aggressive fin-nippers.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is explosive and unstoppable, easily occurring even in cool, unheated tanks. They are highly prolific livebearers; males use their gonopodium to internally fertilize the female. Following a 4-5 week gestation (indicated by a massive, swollen belly and dark "gravid spot"), the female will drop 20-60 massive, fully formed, free-swimming fry. The adults are relentless fry-eaters; the tank MUST contain massive, dense tangles of fine-leaved or floating plants for the fry to hide, or pregnant females must be moved to a breeding trap.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is severe physiological collapse and rapid death caused by keeping them in hot tropical water (above 25°C) or soft, acidic water; cool, hard, alkaline water is strictly, unconditionally mandatory. The second major risk is lethal exhaustion for females caused by housing too many males; the 3-to-1 female-to-male ratio is absolutely critical. Finally, without dense vegetation, 100% of the fry will be completely cannibalized by the adults within hours of birth.

Fish profile

Temperament
Pacifico e attivo. Rapporto 1:2-3 maschio:femmine
Diet
Onnivoro con forte componente vegetale: fiocchi, pellet, spirulina, alghe, zucchine, spinaci sbollentati, artemia, chironomus
Tank level
Zona intermedia
Minimum group
3
Adult size
7 cm
Minimum tank
40 L
GH
7 dGH - 21 dGH
KH
n/a
TDS
n/a
Conductivity
n/a
Feeding frequency
2 volte al giorno
Bioload
Low-medium
Flow
Corrente debole a moderata
Reproduction
Viviparo facile. Gestazione ~30 giorni a 25 °C. A temperature basse il ciclo si allunga. Piante dense per rifugio degli avannotti.
Compatibility
Comunità con pesci pacifici che tollerano acqua dura e alcalina. Compagno ideale per Tanichthys albonubes.

Image gallery

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

Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Xiphophorus variatus.