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Livebearers

Common Molly (Poecilia sphenops): Freshwater or Brackish?

HM

Dr. Helena Marlow

Ichthyologist & Aquarist · ·

Common Molly (Poecilia sphenops): Freshwater or Brackish?
Photo  ·  Tereso Hernández Morales · Wikimedia Commons  ·  CC BY 4.0
Quick Answer
Common Molly (Poecilia sphenops) is a 6–10 cm mineral-demanding livebearer often sold for community tanks but better kept in hard alkaline water, with light brackish water useful for some lines. Keep it at GH 15–30 °dH, KH 8–18 °dH, pH 7.6–8.5, 24–28 °C, with mature filtration, oxygen, and compatible hard-water tankmates. Plan for frequent broods and molly variant confusion; livebearers rarely remain at the number purchased.

Poecilia sphenops is the fish sold as the common molly, a short-finned molly complex from Mexico and Central America with extensive farmed colour strains. It belongs in the complete livebearers guide, where internal fertilisation, sperm storage, hard-water chemistry, and trade hybridisation are treated across the group.

Identification

Short dorsal, deep but not ballooned body, and variable colour. Farm fish may contain ancestry from several molly species.

Character Practical reading
Adult size 6–10 cm
Best temperature 24–28 °C
Water chemistry GH 15–30 °dH, KH 8–18 °dH, pH 7.6–8.5, 24–28 °C
Social structure Groups with female majority
Breeding pattern Lecithotrophic broods every 4–6 weeks

Males are identified by the gonopodium unless the species is one of the non-poeciliid specialists. In poeciliids the gonopodium is a modified anal fin, not a decorative point, and it allows internal fertilisation. Females are deeper through the abdomen, retain a fan-shaped anal fin, and may produce fry after weeks without a male because sperm storage is normal.

Origin & Habitat

The complex occupies streams, canals, springs, and coastal-influenced waters from Mexico into Central America.

The aquarium translation is mineral stability rather than a chase for a single pH number. A tank at GH 14 °dH, KH 8 °dH, pH 7.8, and conductivity near 500 µS/cm is safer for most common livebearers than a soft planted community at GH 4 °dH and pH 6.8. If the tap supply is soft, use GH and KH explained before adding buffers or salts by habit.

Aquarium Husbandry

A 120-litre hard-water tank is a better minimum than the small tanks often suggested. Aerate strongly and keep nitrate low.

Cycle the aquarium before stocking. Livebearers tolerate nitrate better than ammonia, but they do not tolerate new-tank nitrite spikes; cycling a new aquarium is prerequisite reading. New imports should spend four weeks in quarantine, especially guppies and mollies from high-density farms. The quarantine tank protocol is cheaper than medicating a display after the first dead fish.

Hard-water planting is possible. Vallisneria spiralis provides vertical cover and fry shelter; Anubias nana is useful on wood or stone where digging and grazing disturb rooted stems less.

Tankmates & Behaviour

Compatible with other mollies, platies, and hard-water catfish if oxygen is high.

Do not mix by colour alone. Electric yellow cichlids share alkaline water but not social pace; they are Malawi mbuna, not livebearer companions. Siamese fighting fish are a poor match because long fins, slower feeding, and softer-water expectations conflict with active livebearers. Where a tetra is desired, x-ray tetra is more plausible than soft-water species such as black skirt tetra, although chemistry should still be checked.

Diet

Heavy grazing component: algae, aufwuchs, greens, prepared foods, and small invertebrates.

A useful routine is two small feeds daily, one protein-rich and one plant-rich, with one fasting day each week for adult mollies and platies in heavily stocked tanks. Fry need finer food more often, but water quality must not be sacrificed to growth speed.

Breeding

Females may produce 20–80 fry. Do not mix colour variants if you need predictable offspring.

Because females store sperm, a "female-only" tank assembled from shop stock may still produce fry. If breeding is not intended, separate sexes before maturity and keep spare tanks unavailable rather than relying on predators to remove surplus. If breeding is intended, label lines honestly and avoid mixing with close relatives such as guppy, Endler's livebearer, platy, or swordtail where hybridisation is plausible.

Common Problems

Shimmying, clamped fins, and fungus-like lesions usually trace to soft water, chill, or dirty systems — shimmy disorder in mollies goes through the diagnostic steps and the most common overlooked causes.

Chronic wasting, bent spine, or unexplained losses in guppy and molly lines should raise suspicion of mycobacteriosis. Mycobacterium marinum and related species are zoonotic; use gloves if there are skin breaks and do not share nets from suspect tanks. Ragged fins should be separated into social damage versus infection with the fin rot diagnosis guide.

Practical Setup Notes

For this species, the safest aquarium is built around predictable minerals and low social pressure. Test the replacement water before it enters the tank; matching GH and KH matters more than forcing a dramatic pH number. A weekly 30–40% water change is usually enough when stocking is restrained, but livebearer colonies grow quickly and the maintenance schedule must grow with them. If nitrate climbs above 20–30 mg/L between changes, reduce numbers, improve plant growth, or increase water-change volume rather than adding more chemical products.

Arrange the tank so weaker fish can disappear without leaving the feeding area entirely. Tall Vallisneria, branching wood with Anubias attached above the substrate, and open front swimming space work better than a bare tank with one ornament in the centre. Fry refuge should be dense but not filthy; mulm packed into plant bases can shelter young fish while also trapping waste. Rinse mechanical media in old tank water and preserve mature biological media unless medication or confirmed mycobacterial disease forces disinfection.

Buying stock is part of husbandry. Choose fish with full bellies, steady posture, clear fins, and normal spines. Avoid tanks containing dead fish, shimmying mollies, clamped guppies, or individuals breathing hard at the surface. Transport slowly in cold weather, acclimate to matched temperature, and quarantine before mixing lines. Most failures blamed on “sensitive livebearers” begin with weak farm stock placed directly into soft or immature water.

See Also

Frequently Asked Questions

What water parameters does Common Molly need?

Common Molly should be kept around GH 15–30 °dH, KH 8–18 °dH, pH 7.6–8.5, 24–28 °C. Ammonia and nitrite must be 0 mg/L, and nitrate is best held below 20 mg/L with regular water changes.

Can Common Molly live in a soft-water community tank?

No. Soft water is the leading cause of shimmying and early loss.

How can I sex Common Molly?

Males have a gonopodium and slimmer body; females are rounder and larger.

Is Common Molly suitable for beginners?

Moderate. Hardy in the right water, fragile in the wrong water.

Sources & References

  • Meffe, G.K. & Snelson, F.F. (1989). Ecology and Evolution of Livebearing Fishes (Poeciliidae). Prentice Hall.
  • Baensch, H.A. & Riehl, R. (1991). Aquarium Atlas, Volume 1. Mergus Verlag.
  • FishBase species account. https://www.fishbase.se/
  • Catalog of Fishes — Fricke, Eschmeyer & Van der Laan, California Academy of Sciences.