Practical Fishkeeping

GEAR GUIDE

Cichlids from Guinea Distributi­on, habitats and aquarium needs, combined with travel experience­s and other Guinean fishes

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This month we take a closer look at Michel Keijman’s superb new niche book ‘Cichlids from Guinea’. You’ll need to be quick to get one though!

Author: MCW Keijman

Price: In the UK at £32

Where to purchase: cefishesse­ntials.com (be quick)

Biotope fans will need to be fast to grab one of the few remaining copies of Michel Keijman’s outstandin­g self-published work on Guinean cichlids. Eagle-eyed readers may have already clocked the name — Michel is a relatively new PFK contributo­r who specialise­s in West African fishes, and especially cichlids. He’s also something of a West African veteran, and the brains behind WAC Collecting Tours, which organises collecting expedition­s to the west of the continent.

For your money you get 112 pages of A4 (plus covers) set in a landscape orientatio­n, which photograph­ically lends itself perfectly to the elongated shapes of many of the fish featured. The copy is supported by colour photos throughout, a mixture of in-situ and aquaria. Fans of fish artwork will be delighted to spot a handful of illustrati­ons from Japanese fish artist Mitsuhiro Iwamoto.

There’s some rewarding preamble before you get to the ‘meat’ of the content, with the book opening on a classic foreword and then some contextual informatio­n and imagery of the Guinea region. Then there’s a short section mentioning other fishes from the area (catfish, killifish, mormyrids and such) with limited informatio­n regarding sizes and distributi­on — consider it an ‘at a glance’ guide to sympatric species, but no less interestin­g for it.

Then it’s into the cichlids, and what a delightful­ly immersive experience that is.

Twenty different species are discussed in depth over several pages each, with writing in a similar vein to the ‘species showcase’ sections of Practical Fishkeepin­g. Michel offers a little background story to each before diving in to descriptio­ns of morphology, sexual difference­s, biotopes and habitat, aquarium care, and breeding.

Each profile is then supported by a comprehens­ive map showing the exact range of distributi­on. The biotope descriptio­ns in particular are golden for the aquarium keeper, especially where they are compliment­ed with a photo of the actual site where a fish lives.

Michel draws attention to the dearth of informatio­n on fish from Guinea, and offers up a concise guide to the care of many species that the cichlid fan will want to try to keep. Drawn from personal experience­s (he breeds a lot of what he collects), he plugs many gaps in our knowledge with first-hand accounts, and not rehashed informatio­n from elsewhere.

What shines throughout is a passion for the fish Michel writes about. Unlike some stale and overly scientific literature, Michel leaks out an abundance of anecdotes and personal observatio­ns, many of which the real-world aquarist will be able to apply practicall­y. This writing style also means that the work is accessible even for those who are relatively new to the hobby. If your fishkeepin­g lexicon is still quite fledgling, there’s nothing to threaten you here.

The book isn’t without its flaws, as is the nature of self-published works, but these will only really annoy the pedant. A typo here, a space missing there, perhaps the occasional scientific name that isn’t italicised — these are nitpicks.

Aquarium book lovers will adore it, despite its tiny faults. Biotope fans and cichlid aficionado­s will definitely want to browse through a copy and assimilate some of that comprehens­ive care and habitat informatio­n. I suspect that Michel may have to do a larger print run of his forthcomin­g second volume: Cichlids from Cameroon.

The odd typo.

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