Tuxedo Variatus Platy
Tuxedo Variatus Platy
Tuxedo Variatus Platy (Xiphophorus variatus) is a selectively bred color variety of the Variable Platy — a genuinely different species from the standard Common Platy (X. maculatus), though frequently grouped with them at retail. The Variatus is slimmer and more elongated than the standard platy, and mature males develop more complex, multi-color patterning than common platies typically achieve. The Tuxedo pattern — a sharply defined dark rear half contrasting with a lighter, warmer-colored front — looks particularly distinct on the more streamlined Variatus body shape, giving the fish a clean, two-tone elegance that reads differently than the same pattern on a deeper-bodied Common Platy.
Native to the Rio Pánuco system and other rivers of the Atlantic slope of Mexico, where it inhabits shallow, vegetated pools and slow-moving streams. One genuinely useful trait for hobbyists in cooler climates: X. variatus is notably more cold-tolerant than most tropical livebearers, thriving at temperatures as low as 59°F and comfortable at room temperature without a heater in many homes — a meaningful practical advantage over standard tropical fish.
Feeding & Care Tip: Tuxedo Variatus Platies are active, unfussy omnivores. A high-quality flake or small pellet makes an ideal daily staple — choose one with plant matter content, as Variatus platies naturally graze on algae and biofilm and benefit from some vegetable component in their diet. Supplement 2–3× weekly with frozen or freeze-dried brine shrimp, bloodworms, or daphnia for ideal conditioning and to bring out the richest expression of the Tuxedo coloration. Feed small amounts 2–3 times daily rather than one large meal.
Keep in groups with a ratio of two or more females per male — male Variatus platies are persistent in their courtship and a single female will be constantly harassed without other females present to share the attention. The Tuxedo Variatus is a prolific livebearer that will breed readily and continuously in freshwater — if both sexes are present, expect regular small broods. Dense planting gives fry hiding spots and significantly improves survival rates alongside adults.
A peaceful, highly active species that is compatible with virtually all community fish and adult dwarf shrimp. Be aware that they will eat shrimp fry given the opportunity. A tight-fitting lid is recommended — Variatus platies are active surface swimmers and will jump, especially during the acclimation period or when startled.
Care & Ideal Parameters
| Difficulty | Beginner — Easy |
| Temperament | Peaceful, very active — excellent community fish |
| Adult Size | Males to 2 inches (5 cm); females to 2.5 inches (6.5 cm) |
| Recommended Grouping | 1 male to 2+ females minimum; groups of 6+ for best display |
| Ideal Temperature | 65–78°F (18–26°C) — more cold-tolerant than most tropical fish; often kept without a heater |
| Ideal pH | 7.0–8.0 — neutral to slightly alkaline |
| Ideal GH | 10–20 dGH — prefers moderately hard water |
| Staple Food | High-quality flake or small pellet with plant content |
| Treat / Supplement | Frozen/freeze-dried brine shrimp, bloodworms, daphnia — 2–3× weekly |
| Origin | Rio Pánuco drainage and Atlantic slope rivers of eastern Mexico |
| Notes |
Species distinction: X. variatus is a different species from Common Platy (X. maculatus) — slimmer and more cold-tolerant Breeding: Prolific livebearer — breeds continuously; dense planting helps fry survival Shrimp fry: Will eat very small shrimp fry; otherwise safe with adult shrimp Jumping: Active surface swimmer — lid recommended Cold tolerance: Thrives down to 59°F — can often be kept without a heater |