Taxonomy & the radiation
Maylandia was erected by aquarists Michael K. Meyer and Walter Foerster in 1984, originally as a subgenus of Pseudotropheus, with Pseudotropheus greshakei as its type species; the name honors the German aquarist, author and photographer Hans-Joachim Mayland (1928–2004). It sits in the family Cichlidae, subfamily Pseudocrenilabrinae, among the "mbuna" — the rock-dwelling haplochromine cichlids of Lake Malawi.
The genus is the center of a notorious nomenclatural dispute. In 1997 Stauffer, Bowers, Kellogg and McKaye revised the blue-black Pseudotropheus zebra complex and, declaring Maylandia a nomen nudum (a name published without a valid description), coined the replacement name Metriaclima along with ten new species. Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes rejected that reasoning and treats Metriaclima as a junior synonym of Maylandia, a position recently reinforced in detail by Christopher Scharpf's 2025 Zootaxa analysis, which concluded that Meyer and Foerster's 1984 text, though clumsily written, does "purport" to give differentiating characters and so satisfies the ICZN Code in force at the time. The practical result is a split literature: FishBase, the Catalog of Fishes and GBIF use Maylandia; the IUCN Red List, Ad Konings' Cichlid Press, and much of the hobby use Metriaclima. We follow the Catalog of Fishes and use Maylandia, treating Metriaclima as a synonym.
This atlas records seven Maylandia species — among them M. zebra, M. callainos, M. aurora, M. benetos, M. flavicauda, M. livingstonii and M. usisyae — but the genus as broadly construed contains dozens of described forms and many more undescribed geographic races, part of a Lake Malawi cichlid flock of 500-plus species that radiated from a common ancestor within roughly the last million years.
Defining features
Maylandia are stocky, fusiform mbuna with a moderately sloped head and a swollen rostral (snout) tip to the neurocranium. The defining oral signature is a set of isognathous (evenly meeting) jaws bearing bicuspid teeth in the outer rows, backed by less-regularly arranged inner teeth that become largely unicuspid in adults, and small, closely packed, posteriorly serrated pharyngeal teeth — the dentition of a fish built to comb and scrape algae rather than crush hard prey. The classic color theme is bold black vertical bars over a blue ground, though the genus spans solid cobalt morphs, orange-blotch (OB) females, and barred yellows.
Most species are small, in the 3–5 in (8–12 cm) range: M. callainos reaches about 3.1 in (8 cm), M. lombardoi about 3.4 in (8.7 cm), and the type-defining M. zebra about 4.5 in (11.3 cm) standard length. Telling Maylandia from look-alike mbuna genera is genuinely hard in a shop tank and often comes down to dentition, head shape and bar pattern: Pseudotropheus (in the strict sense) tends toward horizontal stripes or rows of spots and tricuspid inner teeth; Tropheops have a steeper, more overhung snout for close grazing; Cynotilapia carry distinctive unicuspid (conical) outer teeth. Because so many forms overlap superficially, locality data is frequently the surest identifier.
Range & habitat
The genus is endemic to Lake Malawi (also called Nyasa/Niassa) and its satellite waters, including Likoma and Chizumulu Islands, with most species further restricted to particular reefs or stretches of shoreline — a microendemism that is the rule rather than the exception among mbuna. Maylandia is an inshore, rocky-biotope specialist: adults occupy the rugged "rocky reef" zone where boulders, cobble and the algae-coated rock surface (the aufwuchs) provide both food and shelter, and they rarely cross expanses of open sand, which acts as a barrier between populations and helps drive their splintering into local races.
Depth is shallow to moderate. M. zebra is typically recorded from about 20–90 ft (6–28 m), with some species favoring clean, sediment-free upper rocks and others (such as M. greshakei) the deeper, sediment-dusted reefs. The water they live in is hard and alkaline: in-situ FishBase values for M. zebra cite a pH near 8.0, a hardness band of roughly 9–19 dH, and temperatures of about 72–82 °F (22–28 °C). A few lineages within the broader genus have broken from the rocks entirely to breed in empty snail shells on sandy bottoms — a niche shift recently formalized in shell-dwelling species like M. ngarae and M. gallireyae.
Ecology & diet
The genus is engineered around aufwuchs grazing. The combed, bicuspid outer teeth and closely set pharyngeal teeth let these fish feed at right angles to the rock face, raking loose algae, diatoms and the small invertebrates living in the biocover — a feeding mode that places M. zebra at a low trophic level (about 2.3 in FishBase diet estimates). Many species are flexible rather than strict grazers; M. zebra, for instance, also rises into open water to take plankton, blurring the line between the lake's rock-scrapers and its midwater feeders.
Within that grazing template there is real divergence. Some forms are dedicated reef scrapers tied to clean rock; others, like M. lombardoi, work the sediment-rich, sandy-muddy patches between rocks; and the shell-dwelling offshoots have shifted toward a sand-and-shell existence altogether. As abundant, territorial herbivores packed onto the reefs, Maylandia are a structuring force in the rocky community — they crop the algal lawn, partition the rock by aggression, and in turn feed the lake's piscivores. Their tight habitat fidelity and trophic specialization are exactly the ingredients that fueled the rapid, sexual-selection-driven speciation documented across the Malawi flock.
Behaviour & breeding
Maylandia are maternal mouthbrooders, the reproductive mode shared across the Malawi haplochromines. Males hold and defend territories — often a cave or a patch of rock — and display in bright nuptial color to court passing females; the female lays a small clutch (M. zebra produces up to about 60 eggs), takes the eggs into her mouth, and fertilizes them via the male's anal-fin egg-spots before retreating to brood the young for roughly three weeks with no paternal help. Broods are small but the strategy is high-investment, and resilience is rated high, with population doubling times under about 15 months.
Socially these are combative fish. Territorial males are persistently aggressive toward rivals and toward similarly patterned intruders, and that aggression is itself a speciation engine: females choosing on subtle color and pattern cues, plus males fighting over reef space, drive the runaway divergence of local forms. Spawning is largely opportunistic given warm, stable, hard water and adequate cover, rather than tied to a strict season.
In the aquarium
Maylandia are among the cornerstone mbuna of the hobby, and they are hardy and rewarding — but the honest word is that they are not easy community fish. The single most common mistake is underestimating their aggression: keepers put a "pretty blue cichlid" in too small or too sparsely stocked a tank and watch the dominant male torment everything else. A realistic minimum for a mixed mbuna group built around Maylandia is a 4 ft / 55-gallon tank, with larger and longer footprints strongly preferred; counterintuitively, these fish do best crowded, with plenty of rock and broken sightlines so aggression is spread thin rather than focused on one target. A lone specimen often fares badly.
The second classic error is hybridization. Closely related Maylandia forms and other zebra-type mbuna interbreed readily in captivity, so mixing congeners — or buying unlabeled "assorted Africans" — quickly produces mongrel fry that muddy bloodlines; serious keepers run single-species or carefully chosen colonies and keep localities separate. Diet is the third pitfall: as algae-grazers adapted to a low-protein aufwuchs diet, they should be fed a vegetable-based/spirulina staple, and overfeeding rich, meaty foods is widely blamed by hobbyists for the digestive condition known as "Malawi bloat." None of these fish is truly delicate, but robust forms such as M. callainos (cobalt blue) and M. zebra are the closest thing to a beginner mbuna, while keeping multiple Maylandia forms pure, or balancing a peaceful tankmate against their temperament, is firmly intermediate-to-advanced work.
Conservation
Maylandia is wholly endemic to the Lake Malawi system, and the genus spans the IUCN spectrum thinly: widespread, adaptable species such as M. zebra are assessed as Least Concern, while narrowly distributed reef endemics known from only one or two locations are inherently more vulnerable to local disturbance even when not formally listed as threatened. Most assessed Maylandia are not at high extinction risk on paper — but that statement should not be mistaken for the lake being healthy. The honest framing is: the fish are mostly fine for now, the lake is increasingly strained.
The collection trade for the aquarium hobby is a real but generally modest and localized pressure on these popular fish; the larger threats are lake-scale. Lake Malawi faces heavy over-fishing — most visibly the collapse of the chambo (Oreochromis) tilapia stocks — alongside sediment and nutrient loading washing off deforested catchments, both of which degrade the clean, structured rocky habitat Maylandia depend on. Climate change compounds this: roughly +0.7 °C of warming in the shallow upper water has strengthened the lake's stratification, limiting the mixing that returns nutrients to the surface and so cutting overall productivity, while introduced and translocated species add further risk (Chavula et al. 2023, J. Great Lakes Res. 49(6):102241). For a genus tied to specific reefs and a low-productivity algae diet, these slow, lake-wide changes — not the aquarium net — are the pressures that matter most.
Sources
- Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes — Maylandia (genus)
- FishBase — Maylandia zebra summary
- FishBase — Maylandia callainos summary
- FishBase — Maylandia lombardoi summary
- FishBase — Maylandia greshakei summary
- GBIF — Maylandia taxon page
- Scharpf 2025 — Scantily clad but not naked: the Metriaclima vs. Maylandia debate (Zootaxa 5620(3))
- Scharpf 2025 — Zootaxa article record (Magnolia Press)
- Stauffer & McKaye 2001 — The naming of cichlids (J. Aquariculture & Aquatic Sciences)
- Danley & Kocher — Speciation in rapidly diverging systems: lessons from Lake Malawi
- PNAS — Phylogeny of a rapidly evolving clade: cichlid fishes of Lake Malawi
- Moran & Kornfield 1993 — Retention of an ancestral polymorphism in the mbuna species flock
- Stauffer et al. 2002 — Behaviour: an important diagnostic tool for Lake Malawi cichlids
- Ad Konings author page — Cichlid Room Companion
- malawi.si — Maylandia / Metriaclima index (species, localities, maps)
- IUCN — Lake Malawi/Nyasa/Niassa Catchment freshwater biodiversity report
- IUCN Red List — Maylandia zebra (Least Concern)
- Lake Malawi/Niassa/Nyasa basin: status, challenges, research priorities (J. Great Lakes Res. 49(6):102241, 2023)
- Vollmer et al. 2005 — Deep-water warming trend in Lake Malawi (Limnol. Oceanogr.)
- cichlid-forum.com — Aquarium for Cobalt Blue Zebra cichlids (keeping experience) — community/anecdotal
- Fishlore forum — blue mbuna compatibility and aggression — community/anecdotal