March 13th, 2012 — 1:23pm
This species is poorly known in general and is not present in the ornamental trade, although its name is widely misapplied to other Luciosoma species. Its congeners are mostly marketed as ‘apollo shark’, ‘shark minnow’, or similar, and often labelled with incorrect scientific names.
Identification of the fish pictured here is based on Bleeker (1855, 1860) and Roberts (1989), plus drawings by Bleeker, thus…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, The Rest
Hampala Barb
March 13th, 2012 — 1:23pm
This species is also known by the vernacular ‘jungle perch’ or ‘sidebar barb’ and should not be considered an aquarium subject in all but the most extreme circumstances since it can grow to over 2 feet in length, weigh in excess of 5 kg and is a powerful, pelagic predator. It’s also a popular sport fish with a reputation for striking hard.
2 comments » | Category: Cypriniformes, The Rest
March 13th, 2012 — 1:22pm
P. apogon has formerly been placed within the genera Kryptopterus, Micronema (Rainboth, 1996) and more recently Phalacronotus (Ferraris, 2007) and is an important food fish across much of its native range.
It’s very similar to P. micronema but can be told apart by its longer head (HL fits 4.6± 5.3 times in…
Comment » | Category: Siluriformes, The Rest
Blue Sheatfish
March 13th, 2012 — 1:22pm
Known from the Malay Peninsula and Singapore plus Greater Sunda Islands of Sumatra, Borneo and Java in Indonesia with populati0ns from Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam formerly considered as conspecific now referred to K. geminus (Ng, 2003).
Type locality is given as ‘Bandjarmassing’ which corresponds to a town now more commonly referred to as ‘Banjarmasin’ in South Kalimantan (Kalimantan Selatan) province, Indonesia (Borneo).
Comment » | Category: Siluriformes, The Rest
Striped Glass Catfish
March 13th, 2012 — 1:22pm
Has been recorded in fast-flowing environments but most commonly associated with peat swamp forests and associated blackwater streams.
Many such habitats have suffered degradation of some kind but in unaltered cases the dense canopy of branches above means very little light penetrates the surface of such environments, and riparian vegetation also tends to grow thickly.
Comment » | Category: Siluriformes, The Rest
Asian Arowana
March 13th, 2012 — 1:22pm
This species is distinguished from its Australian congeners S. jardinii and S. leichardti by possessing a lower number of lateral line scales (21-26 vs 32-36).
It occurs naturally in a number of colour forms of which three were elevated to distinct species status in 2003, but the current majority view is that all represent S. formosus pending a detailed review. Kottelat (2013) mentions that the red form may…
Comment » | Category: Osteoglossiformes, The Rest
Bumblebee Goby
March 13th, 2012 — 1:22pm
This species is among the more frequently-traded members of the genus, although confusion regarding its identification and natural distribution is commonplace and it’s often misidentified as B. nunus or B. xanthozonus.
It can be diagnosed as follows: <30 lateral scales; one black band on head, three on body; first black band on body overlapping first dorsal fin to the extent that almost all fin, except a narrow margin, is black, and beginning opposite centre of opercle...
Comment » | Category: Gobies & Sleepers, Perciformes
Saddle-back Loach
March 13th, 2012 — 1:22pm
This species appears is rare in the aquarium hobby with the majority of images both online and in the published literature instead depicting H. confuzona or H. parclitella. All three are members of the H. ocellata ‘group’ within the genus which currently contains H. ocellata, H. bilineata, H. confuzona, H. orthogoniata, H. ogilviei and H. parclitella.
Following Tan and Ng (2005) these share possession of…
Comment » | Category: Cypriniformes, Loaches
Asian Banjo Catfish, Asiatischer Bratpfannenwels (DE)
March 13th, 2012 — 1:21pm
This is the most commonly-encountered representative of the genus in the aquatic trade though is by no means common. As in other members of the genus body colouration is highly variable, even among individuals collected from a single locality, although a few useful regularities have been observed which can be used to distinguish certain species. This is thought related to the fact that Acrochordonichthys spp. periodically shed their skins and appear paler post-moulting.
A. rugosus lends its …
Comment » | Category: Siluriformes, The Rest
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
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Major Changes in New World Cichlid Taxonomy
Reclassification of Genera: Several genera have been reclassified or merged. For example, the genus Cichlasoma has been split into multiple genera, an...
6th Nov 2024
Aphyosemion rectogoense
Many thanks cyprin, the image has now been removed.
31st Oct 2024