June 20th, 2012 — 3:51pm
The type series was purchased from a market in Jambi province, eastern Sumatra, Indonesia and this species is also known from neighbouring Riau province plus the island province of Bangka. On Sumatra it may be restricted to the Indragiri and Batang Hari river systems.
Inhabits peat swamp forests and associated black water streams in which the water is typically stained brown with humic acids and other chemicals released by decaying organic material. The dissolved mineral content is generally negligible and the pH can be as…
Comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
June 19th, 2012 — 4:51pm
This species is one of three similar-looking members of the genus alongside D. johorensis and D. trifasciatus, while it may also be confused with Striuntius lineatus.
Juveniles of all except S. lineatus exhibit a vertically-barred rather than laterally-striped colour pattern, the metamorphosis to adult patterning beginning at around 20 mm SL and normally being complete by 30-40 mm.
Comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
April 17th, 2012 — 12:51pm
The genus Barbonymus was erected by Kottelat in 1999 and contains former members of Barbodes from southeast Asia. The type species is B. schwanenfeldii and currently there exist only three other representatives; B. altus, B. collingwoodii and B. gonionotus.
The latter two are rare in the hobby although an SF member has kept B. gonionotus in the past so they are worth looking out for if you harbour an…
Comment » | Category: Barbs & relatives, Cypriniformes
March 13th, 2012 — 1:26pm
This hypothetically-undescribed species appears to be a member of the Betta unimaculata complex of closely-related species within the genus, of which members share the following set of characters: body long and slender with depth at dorsal fin origin 18-25 % SL; head large and blunt with width 19-24 % SL; long maxilla and lower lip with distance from tip of lower jaw to posterior end of maxilla 27-54 % HL; caudal-fin rounded in shape, occasionally with elongated median rays; pelvic-fin short and filamentous; dorsal and anal fins relatively pointed.
Comment » | Category: Labyrinth Fishes, Perciformes
Oryzias wolasi PARENTI, HADIATY, LUMBANTOBING & HERDER, 2013
Wolasi Ricefish
March 13th, 2012 — 1:26pm
This species was discovered in 2009 and as far as we know it has only been collected for the aquarium hobby on a single occasion to date, by Jeffrey Christian of Maju Aquarium, Frank Evers and Hans-Georg Evers.
Prior to description it was referred to as O. sp. ‘Kendari’, O. sp. ‘neon’ or O. sp. ‘Sulawesi’.
Comment » | Category: Beloniformes, The Rest
Daisy's Ricefish
March 13th, 2012 — 1:26pm
The type locality is a karstic freshwater stream flowing under 80% forest cover with a mixed substrate of mud and sand plus patches of leaf litter.
O. woworae was collected from a still pool around 3-4 m deep, opposite an affluent spring, where it was schooling with a species of Nomorhamphus which may turn out to be a form of N. ebrardtii but has subsequently appeared in the aquarium trad…
2 comments » | Category: Beloniformes, The Rest
Rainbow Stiphodon
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This species is traded as S. sp. ‘rainbow’, S. sp. ‘gold fin’, or S. sp. ‘gold cheek’ and is among the more widely-available members of the genus although its identity was unclear prior to 2013.
The most commonly-traded fish certainly appears to…
Comment » | Category: Gobies & Sleepers, Perciformes
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
Acanthopsoides spp. are most closely related to the horse-faced loaches of the genus Acantopsis with which they often co-occur in nature, and thus commonly referred to as 'dwarf horse-face loaches'. The genus currently comprises five species of which four were described by Siebert (1991); these were discovered in existing museum holdings…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
Orange-fin Stiphodon
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This species was referred to as S. sp. ‘orange fin’ or S. sp. ‘ST01’ prior to being offically named and is one of the more commonly-traded members of the genus, though often in batches containing only one gender, a mixture of species, or misidentified under an incorrect name such as S. zebrinus.
It can be told apart from congeners by the following combination of characters: usually 9 soft second dorsal-fin rays; 15 soft pectoral-fin rays; first dorsal-fin in male poin…
Comment » | Category: Gobies & Sleepers, Perciformes
March 13th, 2012 — 1:25pm
This appears to be an undescribed species, and has only been available to the aquarium hobby in limited numbers to date. The rather long-winded trade name derives from the fact that it was initially marketed as two different species, i.e., B. sp. ‘Sengalang’ and B. sp. ‘Palangka’. The spelling of the latter was later corrected but the fish may still be seen with either or both names attached.
It looks very similar to fis…
Comment » | Category: Labyrinth Fishes, Perciformes
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