Crystal-eyed Catfish
March 13th, 2012 — 1:21pm
Aggressively territorial and incompatible with other fishes in all but the largest public installations and even then may attack its tankmates.
It’s also one of few freshwater fishes that appear unafraid of humans meaning care must be exercised when performing maintenance.
1 comment » | Category: Siluriformes, The Rest
Flying Fox
March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm
Confusion with similar-looking fishes from other genera, such as Garra cambodgiensis, laterally-striped Crossocheilus spp. or Gyrinocheilus aymonieri is not uncommon, and are largely attributable to the use of trade names such as ‘false flying fox’ or ‘Siamese flying fox’. When compared with the other species E. kalopterus exhibits several unique characters but perhaps the simplest way to identify it is by the characteristic white-edged, red and black coloured fins and the presence of two pairs of barbels.
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, The Rest
Pearl 'Danio'
March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm
Doubts remain whether B. albolineata is representative of a single species or a group of similarly-patterned, closely-related fish, and the form from Chantaburi province in eastern Thailand was revalidated as B. pulchra (formerly Danio pulcher Smith, 1931) by Kottelat (2013). The status of the currently invalid Danio tweedei (Brittan, 1955) from Kedah state, northern Peninsular Malaysia may also be in question, since fish from that area are clearly…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Danios & relatives
March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm
This species is uncommon in the aquarium hobby, although the scientific name is widely misapplied to Barbodes dunckeri, a similar-looking species native to Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore commonly referred to as ‘clown barb’ and labelled as B. everetti in the majority of available literature. The two are quite easy to tell apart, with B. everetti an overall less…
1 comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
Lined Barb
March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm
One of four similar-looking, laterally-striped ‘Puntius‘ spp. native to Southeastern Asia alongside ‘P.‘ gemellus, ‘P.‘ johorensis, and ‘P.‘ trifasciatus. Of these ‘P.‘ lineatus is most often confused with ‘P.‘ johorensis by virtue of the fact that these two seem most common in the aquarium trade.
Telling them apart is relatively simple since ‘P.‘ lineatus has 0 – 1 pairs of barbels (vs. 2 pairs in the other three species), juv…
Comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
Spanner Barb
March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm
This species is commonly-referred to as ‘T-barb’ in some countries. It’s closely-affiliated with and sometimes traded as the congener B. kuchingensis but that species can be told apart by colour pattern comprising a prominent row of dark spots along the lateral line, plus a short, horizontally-orientated streak extending from the upper part of the operculum. In B. lateristriga the lateral markings usually form a solid stripe and there is no streak extending from the operculum.
Comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
Tinfoil barb
March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm
This is one of two species traded under the vernacular name ‘tinfoil barb’, the other being the less well-known congener B. altus. Despite this it appears that B. altus is just as widely available as B. schwanefeldii and in many cases is seen on sale more regularly. Unfortunately both are usually offered at a small size (usually around 50 – 75 mm) with little to no information regarding the eventual size of the fish.
Comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
Checkered Barb
March 13th, 2012 — 1:18pm
This species is also traded as ‘checker barb’, ‘checkerboard barb’, or ‘island barb’, and is among the most ubiquitous species available in the aquarium trade. It is farmed commercially in enormous numbers with wild examples rarely, if ever, available.
It was formerly included in the polyphyletic catch-all genus Puntius which contained over 100 species, but this situation has been largely resolved since the turn of the century.
1 comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
Green Swordtail
March 13th, 2012 — 1:18pm
Wild swordtails are a fairly basic green colur. However the vast majority of swordtails available in the hobby today are hybrids of X.helleri with X.maculatus or X.variatus. There are a huge number of selectively-bred varieties available, including wagtail, lyretail, tuxedo, albino, neon, red, green and hi-fin.
Swordtails may undergo what appears to be a change in sex. In young fish this may simply be late development. However some adult females develop male characteristics which is thought …
2 comments » | Category: Cyprinodontiformes, Cyprinodontoid Toothcarps
Tiger Barb
March 13th, 2012 — 1:18pm
P. tetrazona is traditionally considered to be among the most ubiquitous species available in the aquarium trade. Wild examples are rarely traded, however, and there exists ongoing confusion as to the identity of the commercially-produced ‘aquarium’ tiger barb.
A number of selectively-bred, ornamental strains are available. The albino, ‘green’ (aka ‘moss’), and ‘golden’ (leucistic) variants are particularly pop…
10 comments » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
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Hey! Interesting article!
17th Dec 2024
Site improvements
Got it! Thanks for the update. It's good to know that Seriously Fish is working on improving the site's performance and addressing the email and forum...
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