Abstract
The early development of five species of substrate‐brooding cichlid (Aequidens pulcher; Cichlasoma bimaculatum; C. biocellatum; C. nigrofasciatumandHemichromis bimaculatus) is described. Heterochrony in these species renders the standard system of staging inadequate for comparative study. A new system is proposed in which the period of development is resolved into five overlapping phases, each phase corresponding to a dissociable ontogenetic process. This form of staging permits comparison in a way which neither obscures the basic uniformity of cichlid development nor masks the differences between the species.Two special features are discussed: the universal presence in substrate‐brooding cichlids of three pairs of embryonic adhesive organs; and the apparent presence of non‐neural crest pigment on the embryos and alevins.