Green Sailfin Molly
The green which has a green hue.
Green sailfin molly. This is an aquarium strain fish we ve been working on for quite some time. It is also called midnight molly. Cenderung kuning dengan variasi motif hijau muda menyala yang memenuhi tubuhnya.
In other words the gold could mate with the red or green. You have a beautiful molly there nosoup but it is an aquarium molly not a true wild type green molly. The various colored sailfin molly fish do not stop them from mating with each other.
It can brighten up any aquarium and is relatively easy to care for. As the name shows it is black in appearance. By mixing different colors you will get a beautiful display for your aquarium especially if it is a large tank 20 gallons or more.
Victora do you know where your sailfin is a vellifera or a latipinna. The photo is of a mature male green sailfin molly. The lyretail is a dead giveaway on that.
Wild green sailfin molly. A large male green sailfin molly from four years ago and one of our breeders used in our attempt to create a giant molly. The green sailfin molly is an energetic fish with a beautiful and attractive metallic sheen.
We raise all three of the wild sailfins. I also have and enjoy my lyretails but they are not green sailfins. It is green in color with orange spots on the body.
The sailfin molly is a tolerant species as it can exploit the thin film of oxygen rich surface water with its upturned mouth so is able to survive oxygen depleted habitats. To develop this strain we have crossed three wild sailfin mollies poecilia latipinna p. Usually found in brackish ditches and pons.
It is the result of interbreeding of three molly fishes. A euryhaline species the sailfin molly may be found in a variety of saline environments tolerating salinities as high as 87 ppt and breeding in brackish waters. For about eight years i ve been working to develop a very large green sailfin molly which i creatively named giant green sailfin mollies ggsm for short for the rest of this blog.
It is a peaceful fish native to north america. Though they are more herbivores than omnivores and feed on a vegetable rich diet including spirulina based flakes. Sample of the fish we sell at first coast tropical fish.