This is not the first time I've read of different A. species being kept together. Are our little friends "smarter than the average bear" and not prone to hybridizing? (I know of the three species, the three-rivers-becoming-one Apistos that do not interbreed... The ones with the vertical, horizontal, and combo dorsal spots... David, I need your help here with what I'm talking about!) I've taken great pains to keep my A. pandurinis and A. trifaciatas apart... Is this not necessary with Apistos? Or just some of the species? On the whole, am I better off to be safer than sorrier and continue as I have? green -----Original Message----- From: owner-apisto@admin.listbox.com [mailto:owner-apisto@admin.listbox.com]On Behalf Of Zack Wilson Sent: Monday, May 20, 2002 10:10 PM To: apisto@listbox.com Subject: Re: Apistogramma moae I set them up in a 15 with a few other Apisto spare parts. Zack ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is the apistogramma mailing list, apisto@listbox.com. For instructions on how to subscribe or unsubscribe or get help, email apisto-request@listbox.com. apisto-digest@listbox.com also available. Web archives at http://lists.thekrib.com/apisto ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is the apistogramma mailing list, apisto@listbox.com. For instructions on how to subscribe or unsubscribe or get help, email apisto-request@listbox.com. apisto-digest@listbox.com also available. Web archives at http://lists.thekrib.com/apisto