Thanks Childawg, I love my hets is a certain thing. I read about them in a FAMA about 5 years ago and wanted them ever since. I finally got my first colony of them this past spring from an online dealer. Ever since going to this site, I have been hooked on Native fish as pets.
These guys will readly breed for you in the tank, school and the males will chase each other around. These guys are used to being in slow moving waters so a small tank would do very well for them. I have been told some breeders have kept colonies in a 1 gallon jar sucessfully. And when I say they are tiny, I do mean tiny. Wild guppies are much larger than these guys and Neons are way larger than they are. I know they do not have the bright colors as Neons or Endlers, but they are pretty in their own right. Besides having the red spot varient, there are also a gold varient. Now these tend to be in a bigger demand than the normal strain.
Another big bonus for them, they do not need to have a heater in the tank. They will do fine at room temp, unlike neons.
As for feeding, I have fed them live brine shrimp, crushed flake (I mix a vegie based flake with a regular tropical mix), Live and dehydrated daphnia. They are not to picky on what they eat.
Now these are probably the only fish I would put into a school in a tank this size. These guys are very good for beginners, another fish I have heard that will breed in a tank this size is Elassoma okeefenokee the Pygmy sunfish. But these guys are more for the advanced aquarists, they require live foods and very clean water. I believe they get up to 1.75 inches big, not a very large fish. But very pretty, in spawning season, the male will be black with bright blue spots.
I believe that Native fish are in a back seat in the fish trade, with all the imported exotics. I guess, that is why, i am always harping about these guys, to pass the knowledge. And maybe get someone else into natives that are not larger sunfish or catfish.
jim