Originally Posted by
BTLDreef
http:///forum/post/3222051
Okay, so I'm fairly certain that the so-called "mated pair" are both females.
So I think I have a female. I don't want two females, so the question is, will the dominant one become male or the other way, you get the point....
At this time, the unofficial answer is no, they are not hermaphrodites, at least not as far as anyone knows. That said, I had a female that got along with others for a long time, then one day, no longer...the male she was with became vicious towards her. I pulled her into QT, she recovered, and I put her with a different male, and same response. Ultimately she did not recover the second time around. The reality is that these males were reacting the way they normally react to fish that are outwardly male.
When we moved our tanks from Chicago to Duluth MN (talk about a nightmare) we ultimately lost most of our more sensitive fish...one of which was the spawning male from my productive pair. The female lived alone for a month or two, and then I found a male, trained him and introduced him. They were very happy for about a day, and ever since, the new male is anything but kind. The question is - did the lone female start turning into a male, or is this simply a case of two individual personalities not meshing. We may know if I swap out the male for the other one sitting in QT right now
Pile onto that the photos taken by one aquarist that shows a fish that appears to be clearly female, yet something like 8 months later, is undeniably a male. So is this indicative of a --- change, or could it be that the "female" coloration is the same as that of a juvenile?
I'm guessing we'll have all of these questions answered once I rear a sizable batch of babies, and provided I have some spawning broodstock, I should get that accomplished in 2010. Then we'll know...if 50% of the babies show male coloration at 6-12 months, it will be very easy to say these are gonochorists. If I pull out and make 6 or 12 pairs out of juveniles and they all ultimately turn out to be male/female pairs, there is certainly hermaphrodism involved!