| Meaning 
        of Name | 
       
         After 
Yngve Sjöstedt, the collector.  | 
  
      | First 
        Description | 
       
         Lönnberg 
A.J.E. 1895 (Fundulus Sjöstedti). Notes 
on the fishes collected in the Cameroons by Dr. Y.Sjöstedt. Ofversigt 
af Konglar Svenska Vetenskaps Akademiens Förhandlingar 3: p 191-193.  | 
 
 
      | Size | 
       
         14 cm  | 
  
      | Meristics | 
       
         - D = 17-18, A = 17, ll = 27-28 (Lönnberg 1895)
 - D 
= 11-12, A = 13-14, ll = 30-32 (Ahl 1924)
 - D 
= 14-18, A = 16-19, ll = 31-37 (Scheel 1968)
   | 
  
      | Karyotype | 
       
         n = 20, A = 20 (Scheel 1968, 1975)  | 
 
 
      | Sub-Genus | 
       
         Fundulopanchax  | 
  
      | Group | 
       
            | 
  
      | Synonyms | 
       
         - Fundulus sjöstedti 
Lönnberg 1895
 - Fundulus gularis 
var A. Arnold 1908
 - Fundulus gularis 
Blau Fischer 1910
 - Fundulus gularis 
var. coerulea Boulenger 1915
 - Aphyosemion 
(Fundulopanchax) coeruleum 
Myers 1924
 - Fundulus caeruleus 
Ahl 1924
 - Fundulus 
zimmeri Ahl 1924
 - Fundulopanchax 
coeruleus Stolzenhain 1927
 - Fundulopanchax 
coeruleum Rachow 1928
 - Fundulus 
sjoestedti Holly 1930
 - Fundulopanchax 
zimmeri Meinken 1930
 - Aphyosemion 
zimmeri Myers 1933
 - Aphyosemion 
caeruleum Myers 1933
 - Nothobranchius 
coeruleus Ladewig 1935
 - Aphyosemion 
coeruleum Arnold & Ahl 1936
 - Aphyosemion 
sjoestedti Clausen 1966
 - Fundulopanchax 
sjoestedti Parenti 1981
 - Aphyosemion 
(Fundulopanchax) sjoestedti 
Huber 1994
   | 
  
      |  
         Populations 
        
          - Dwarf Red
 
          - Fungé
 
          - Lagos
 
          - Loé
 
          - Port Harcourt
 
          - Ndian River
 
          - Niger Delta
 
          - Oteri Delta
 
          - Sapele 
 
          - USA (An 
            import from the USA into France around the early '80's & was distributed 
            with this name).
 
          - Warri
 
          - CJ 05 - Niger Delta
 
             
         
       | 
       
        
            
          Fp.sjoestedti. 
            Photo courtesy of Ed Pürzl. 
  
             
              |  
                   
                A Spanish import 
                  to the 2003 BKA convention. 
                  
               | 
               
                   
                Form circulating in the 
                  BKA early 1980's 
               | 
               
                   
                Form known to be circulating 
                  in the USA.  
                  Photo courtesy of Monty Lehmann. 
               | 
             
           
          Dwarf Red -  
          
             
              |  
                   
                Dwarf Red. 
                  Photo: Roger Gladwell 
                  Note spacing of bars in rear half of body. 
               | 
               
                   
                Dwarf Red. Photo 
                  courtesy of Adam Rychlik 
               | 
               
                   
                Dwarf Red. Circulating 
                  in the BKA early 1980's 
               | 
             
             
              |  
                   
                Dwarf Red male.  
                   
                  Photo courtesy of Ed Pürzl. 
               | 
               
                   
                Dwarf Red female.  
                   
                  Photo courtesy of Ed Pürzl. 
               | 
               
                   
                Dwarf Red female 
                  in circulation in the BKA early 1970's 
                  BKA photo. 
               | 
             
             
              |  
                   
                 | 
               
                   
                Dwarf Red in 
                  circulation in the BKA early 1970's 
                  BKA photo. 
                 | 
                | 
             
           
          Loe -  
          
             
              |  
                   
                Loé. 
                  Wild male collected by Viktor 
                  Schwoisser near to Fungé. Photo courtesy of Ed Pürzl. 
               | 
               
                   
                Loé. 
                  Wild male as left. Photo courtesy 
                  of Ed Pürzl. 
               | 
               
                   
                Loe 
                  Photo courtesy of Günther 
                  Schmaus.  
               | 
             
             
              |   | 
               
                   
                Loé. 
                  Female. 
                  Photo courtesy of Alberto Restrepo Ubach 
               | 
                | 
             
           
          Oteri Delta - Seen on Aquabid 
            from France April 2023. 
          Warri - This is the accepted 
            name in the hobby. In reality the location can be seen spelt Wauri 
            or Waurri. First seen in AKA auctions in 1990 & probably first 
            imported to the UK in 1992.  
            Warri is a swamp area. I have talked to a Nigerian working on a thesis 
            on other species but knows the Warri area. He informed me that the 
            Warri area is destroyed by petro-chemical industrial activity. It 
            is highly probable this population is extinct in nature. 
            An article appears in AKA Journal Sept/Oct 1992. In this mention is 
            made to a blue & an orange form in reference to the caudal fin. 
            It has been found that egg production increases when only 1 male is 
            used in the breeding set up. Sexing out can be as early as 3/4". 
          Roger Gladwell in BKA newsletter 
            No.472, January 2005 gives a breeding report. Males were aggressive 
            to females & they needed 2-3. Over a period of time the eggs became 
            more infertile & less in number. With these older fish the few 
            eggs which were good were stored on peat. It was not until 6 months 
            had past that the eggs started to develop & at a rapid pace. At 
            6 months & 2 weeks he wet the peat & hatched 4 females & 
            6 males. 
            These fish grew well but refused to breed. When they were very old 
            he put them into 15" deep, planted tanks with a couple of bottom 
            mops. In this set up they laid a lot of eggs which were put on peat. 
            These took 5 months of incubation before hatching started. 
            These fish were raised & set up to breed at a young age. Eggs 
            from these hatched after 3 months of incubation. 
          Roger's reference to 15" 
            deep tanks reminded me of a piece in Amiet's book 'Fauna of Cameroon' 
            (p162) where he mentions ' In Cameroon, the annuals or semi annuals 
            which colonise sandy holes can, however, live in slightly deeper water 
            (in the region of a metre?)'. 
          
             
               
                 
                    
                  Warri 
                    male. 
                 
               | 
               
                 
                    
                  Warri 
                    female. 
                 
               | 
               
                 
                    
                  Warri 
                    male. 
                 
               | 
             
             
              |  
                   
               | 
               
                   
                Warri. 
                   Taken in my fish house by Dick Cox. 
               | 
               
                   
                Warri 
                  male throat pattern. 
               | 
             
           
           
           
            
         
       | 
  
      | Type 
        Locality | 
       
         A 
rivulet near to the waterfall of the Ndian River, western Cameroon.  | 
 
 
      | Distribution | 
       
         Coastal western Nigeria, Niger delta & the extreme 
west of Cameroon where they inhabit areas on sedimentary soils.  | 
 
 
      | Habitat | 
       
         Raffia swamps, temporary pools & swamp areas & 
swampy areas of slow flowing streams. Scheel, in ROTOW 
1 considered the extent of there western distribution area was Lagos, Nigeria.  | 
 
 
      | Distinguishing 
        Characteristics | 
      Not 
        really likely to be confused with any other species. The caudal fin has 
        a red / orange colouration in the lower half & the upper half has 
        spots or lines. Most populations have a wide pale blue outer margin in 
        the lower caudal fin. The upper outer margin is narrower. | 
    
  
      | Colour/Pattern 
        Variability | 
      Medium 
        / high | 
    
  
      | History | 
       
         Lönnberg described this sp. in 1895 from 2 specimens. 
The first specimen (a male) was collected in a small brook near the waterfall 
on the Ndian River. The second (a female) was collected from Bonge, west Cameroon. 
This specimen was badly damaged. Both were collected by Sjöestedt in 1891-92 
who collected them below the falls where the Ndian factory was then located. He 
travelled to these locations by boat.  In 1966 
Scheel & Clausen attempted to collect them around M'bonge on the Meme River 
but were unsuccessful. Scheel considered that Sjöestedt's Bonge was situated 
closer to the coast than the present day location of M'bonge, both localities 
were on the Meme River.  Boulenger misidentified this sp. & called them 
Fundulus gularis 
var. coerulea Boulenger 1915.  The 
name sjoestedti has been used since 1910 to 
describe populations of occidentalis. Again, 
Boulenger misidentified a collection from Sherboro Island off the coast of Sierra 
Leone as sjoestedti. Also misidentified was 
a list of specimens from Akonolinga, east Cameroon. These were referable to batesii.  
Krüger reported that Sjöestedt informed him in 1912 that the fish named 
after him were caught in the Njong (Nyong) River above the falls some 200 kms 
from the sea near a station named Atiga-Samboso. Scheel reported that his book 
(published in 1904) contained no information about his visiting the Nyong drainage 
between 1890-92 but that he may have been there at a later date. The area 200 
km from the coast ( between Akonolinga & Mbalmayo) is an area known to have 
A.batesii. Boulenger 
gives the following collectors / locations in his 1915 Catalogue.  
- 1-5. Collected at Akonolinga, Nyong River, southern 
Cameroon by G.L.Bates
 - 6-9. Donated to the 
BMNH by J.P.Arnold from a Calabar collection.
 - 10-11. 
Donated to the BMNH by J.P.Arnold from a collection at Sherboro.
 - 12-13. 
Donated to the BMNH by Mr. A.Rachow from a collection from Axim, Gold Coast
  
  Myers used coerulea 
(sjoestedti) as the type sp. for Fundulopanchax.  
In 1966 Clausen suggested that all localities west of the Dahomey Gap referred 
to as sjoestedti should be named occidentalis 
as sjoestedti is known to inhabit eastern 
Nigeria & Cameroon. The BKA received fish 
from the AKA in 1970 for distribution through the species controller.   
History of the synonym Fundulus 
gularis var. coerulea Boulenger 1915 Groch 
collected the first specimen (a male) kept in aquaria near Warri, western Niger 
Delta. This specimen (according to Arnold in 1906) was the first shipment of aquarium 
fishes sent from Atlantic Africa. This shipment arrived in Hamburg on the 4th 
of November 1905. Arnold maintained this male for about a year & reported 
it growing to 4" (10 cm).  Quite a few imports were recorded in these 
early years. August 1906: several specimens sent to Germany but all were lost 
soon after. December 1906: A female was imported which Arnold had. September 1907: 
28 live specimens were imported. Arnold had a pair of 2 colour varieties. He made 
drawings of both varieties & sent them to Boulenger along with the 1906 female. 
He identified all as gulare.  The first 
photograph to be published (in 1908) was taken by Oelze. In the same year Arnold 
succeeded in breeding them.  Other imports were receiced into Germany up to 
1911 & were called 'var.A (blue)' & var.B.(yellow)'. These names were 
recommended by Arnold in 1908. Both varieties were bred by other aquarists.  
German breeders were not in agreement with Boulenger's identification but Boulenger 
did not change his mind. Boulenger even visited Arnold in April 1911 & saw 
the live fish but still did not change his mind. He did acknowledge Arnold in 
a note published in 1915 quoting "In a large var.coerulea 
(var. A. Arnold) the body of the male is bluish 
with red vertical bars & the caudal is yellow in the middle & blue above 
& below".  In 1924 Ahl considered them to be a distinct sp. on the 
basis of scale count & colours.  In 1924 Myers made coerulea 
the type species for the genus Fundulopanchax 
( in Aphyosemion).  Clausen, in 1966, considered 
coerulea to represent a synonym of sjoestedti.  
See also Fp.gularis.  
   History of the synonym Fundulus 
zimmeri Ahl 1924 Ahl described 
this sp. from 2 specimens said to have originated from the aquarium trade in Germany 
(Berlin Aquarium according to Meinken in 1930). He considered this material to 
have been collected from the mouth of the Niger but no evidence was reported. 
Meristically they were reported as D=11-12, A=13-14, the size was measured at 
7 cm.  Radda examined the preserved fish & reported that the broad bands 
on the body were not really broad & neither were they cross-barred as an Epiplatys 
sp.  | 
  
      | Breeding 
        Notes | 
       
         Best maintained in larger aquaria. Eggs can be 
          layed in bottom mops, peat substrate (which can be dried every few weeks) 
          or sand. Dry incubation takes about 6 - 16 weeks. Water incubation takes 
          around 3-6 weeks. Fry are large enough on hatching to take newly hatched 
          brine shrimp. Growth is quite fast with first signs of sexing out being 
          observed after 6 weeks. 
          This is a large species & regular water 
          changes are advised when growing young on. 
        Brian Horsfall in BKA Newsletter No. 310, July 
          1991 recorded the need to put fresh eggs in water with an acid pH as 
          low as pH 3·8 - 4 for the first few days. 
        George Mamonov in BKA newsletter No. 335, August 
          1993 reports incubating the eggs at 18-23°C for around 3 months. 
          It can take up to 14 hours for htching using melted ice or snow to hatch 
          eggs at 24-26°C. This water was subjected to UV light for 3-10 minutes. 
          Fry were sensitive to water changes & would die over pH 7. 
       | 
 
 
      | Diameter 
        of Egg | 
        | 
    
  
      | Remarks | 
       
        The dwarf red variety was introduced into the AKA 
        in 1969 by Mr. Jue. The exact origin of this strain is unknown. 
         Sterba in Freshwater 
Fishes reported that young hatch in 3-9 weeks.  
http://www.djramsey.com/tropfish/blue_gularis.htm Dave 
Ramsey's page.   |