I had two males that tolerated eachother and colored up, but I just sold the smaller one. Kinda just didn't want the disapointment of finding the smaller one dead one day. Ferns have showed allot of red on the belly since a young age. Looking great Fern !
A little info-- please feel free to correct me as I am going on memory of a book I read earlier in the summer.
Fulu have a wide range of features in the states which has caused some speculation of hybridization, to complicate it even more Fulu and other Victorians can morph at amazing speeds, and change greatly in only a few generations. Lake Victoria is kinda of like a very young Lake Malawi which makes it extremely interesting. Almost beyond Macro Evolution. Shall I dub it Hyper-Macro-Evolution? It has turned the scientific community on it's head to some degree about what they thought was possible, and not possible. The lake was dry fairly recently I believe 2000 years ago (help me out fern, don't have the konnings book with me). It's an amazingly short amount of time for 600+ species to evolve from just a few. They are capable of evolving in the blink of an eye, depending on diet and environment sometimes with very similar species evolving side by side (something scientists thought impossible previously). Of those 600 species which were not reckongnized till the 70's? (fern? :?: ) in the mid 80's they were down to just 300 or so do to industry polluting water ways, and perhaps most destructive was the introduction of the Nile Perch (illegally I might add... then they said, oh well since it's already been introduced let's introduce some more :evil: ). Christmas Fulu are actually considered extinct in Lake Victoria, but can be found in near bye water ways. The saddest thing is of the fish we lost the majority were the large unique open water predatory Cichlids many of which we simply will never even know existed. They could not compete with the large predatory nile perch that likely hunted them as well. The nile perch population has declined in recent years, perhaps because of the dwindling food supply. The cichlids near the rocky shores have faired best likely because of the protection it provided.
Ad Konings has a great book about the Victoria Basin Cichlids, and it is actually quite valuable if you can find it. it's a heavy ready but worth the effort.