Never can be certain about it because if the Con is bigger than the cray then it will prob eat it if not at first soon after it molts for the first time. If the cray is bigger than your con then it will be fine but one night when the cray is feeding it grabs the con with its claws then it will eat your con best thing to do is introduce them both at same time around same size give plenty of cray friendly hiding spots and be aware of the molting and they should live fine together but one day you will prob wake up to one eating the other could be sooner than later or could be a year from now never know till ya try.
if its a young crayfish and a big cichlid itll eat the crayfish if the crayfish is a adult they will pick on each other as long as the cichlid isn't big enough to put the crayfish in its mouth and the cichlid isn't slow enough for a crayfish to catch
Generally, cichlid eggs such as those laid by convicts hatch in three to five days. Convicts are relatively easy fish to breed.
Crayfish, crawchie, crawdad or yabby they are all the same thing. They will be better off on Cichlid pellets than Goldfish food. They are mainly carnivors.
Central America Guatemala and Panama and their neighbouring countries are the home of the Convict Cichlid (Amatitlania nigrofasciata)
just your convict cichlids but, a jack would need a 55
The snapping turtle will eat the crayfish. So no they will not get along
anywhere from a couple of days to a couple of weeks it really depends on what africans your talking about.
convict cichlids are the most aggressive cichlid there is it will fight with all fish convicts an green terror cichlids are the most aggressive cichlids so i would suggest that you not do that if you are about both fish
yes its possible for them to croos breed and when will my convict cichlid fry become looking like convicts they look like tadpole now
Yes.
yes
Yes. Blue herons eat crayfish, along with fish, frogs and even small mammals and reptiles.