Haplochromine
The haplochromine cichlids are a tribe of cichlids in subfamily Pseudocrenilabrinae called Haplochromini. This group includes the type genus Haplochromis plus a number of closely related genera such as Aulonocara, Astatotilapia, and Chilotilapia. They are endemic to eastern, southern and northern Africa, except for Astatotilapia flaviijosephi in the Middle East. A common name in a scientific context is East African cichlids—while they are not restricted to that region, they are the dominant Cichlidae there. This tribe was extensively studied by Ethelwynn Trewavas, who made major reviews in 1935 and 1989, at the beginning and at the end of her career in ichthyology. Even today, numerous new species are being described each year.
The haplochromines were in older times treated as subfamily Haplochrominae, However, the great African radiation of pseudocrenilabrine cichlids is certainly not monophyletic without them, and thus they are today ranked as a tribe therein. They do include, however, the type genus of the subfamily Pseudocrenilabrus. Since taxonomic tribes are treated like genera for purposes of biological nomenclature according to the ICZN, the Haplochromis is the type genus of this tribe, and not the Pseudocrenilabrus, even though the tribe name Pseudocrenilabrini was proposed earlier.
File:Copadichromis cf. azureus.jpg|thumb|left|Male Copadichromis guarding his nest-site in Lake Malawi
In the African Great Lakes, there has been an amazing adaptive radiation of Haplochromini. Many have interesting behavior, and brilliant colors are also widespread. Males and females are often strikingly sexually dichromatic. In the aquarium hobby, these fishes are popular; however due to their often aggressive behaviors and rather unusual water parameters, they are generally unsuitable for beginners or community tanks. There are some informal names used among aquarists for Haplochromini. Generally, any and all may be referred to haplos, haps or happies. More specific terms are mbuna and utaka, which are Bantu terms for these two ecological groups.
Haplochromines inhabit both rivers and lakes, but it is the lake species that have been most closely studied because of the species flocks known from some of the larger lakes, such as Lake Malawi. In the aquarium hobby, the "happies" are conveniently divided into four groups:
- Riverine species and those endemic to the northern Great Lakes such as Lake Kivu and Lake Victoria
- Mbuna, endemic to Lake Malawi
- Utaka and other non-mbuna species endemic to Lake Malawi
- Species endemic to Lake Tanganyika
Genera
As numerous Haplochromini, in particular those species still placed in the "wastebin genus" Haplochromis, are of unclear relationships, the number and validity of genera in this tribe is subject to change. Hybrid introgression is seriously hampering molecular phylogenetic studies of this group.- Abactochromis
- Alticorpus
- Aristochromis
- Astatoreochromis
- Astatotilapia
- Aulonocara
- Buccochromis
- Caprichromis
- Champsochromis
- Cheilochromis
- Chetia
- Chilotilapia
- Copadichromis
- Corematodus
- Ctenochromis
- Ctenopharynx
- Cyathochromis
- Cyclopharynx
- Cynotilapia
- Cyrtocara
- Dimidiochromis
- Diplotaxodon
- Docimodus
- Eclectochromis
- Exochochromis
- Fossorochromis
- Genyochromis
- Gephyrochromis
- Haplochromis
- Hemitaeniochromis
- Hemitilapia
- Iodotropheus
- Konia
- Labeotropheus
- Labidochromis
- Lethrinops
- Lichnochromis
- Maylandia/Metriaclima
- Mbipia
- Mchenga
- Melanochromis
- Microchromis
- Mylochromis
- Naevochromis
- Neochromis
- Nimbochromis
- Nyassachromis
- Orthochromis
- Otopharynx
- Pallidochromis
- Petrotilapia
- Pharyngochromis
- Placidochromis
- Protomelas
- Pseudocrenilabrus
- Pseudotropheus
- Pundamilia
- Pungu
- Pyxichromis
- Rhamphochromis
- Sargochromis
- Sciaenochromis
- Schwetzochromis
- Serranochromis
- Stigmatochromis
- Taeniochromis
- Taeniolethrinops
- Thoracochromis
- Tramitichromis
- Trematocranus
- Trematochromis
- Tropheops
- Tyrannochromis
General and cited references
- : '. Version 2009.1. Retrieved 2009-SEP-20.
- : Dietary shift in benthivorous cichlids after the ecological changes in Lake Victoria. Anim. Biol. 58: 401-417.
- : The Cichlid Aquarium. Voyageur Press..
- : Classification and Phylogenetic Relationships of African Tilapiine Fishes Inferred from Mitochondrial DNA Sequences. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 20''': 361–374..