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Desmopuntius pentazona (BOULENGER, 1894)

Five-banded Barb

March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm

This species is rare in the aquarium trade with the majority of fish available under the name or the vernacular ‘pentazona barb’ being the closely-related D. hexazona.

The two are almost identical in terms of both appearance and meristics but can be separated by the fact that D. pentazona possesses a small dark marking at the posterior base of the dorsal-fin which is absent in D. hexazona.

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Geophagus winemilleri LÓPEZ-FERNÁNDEZ & TAPHORN, 2004

March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm

This species is rare in the hobby although other species are sometimes sold under the name. It’s a member of the nominal G. surinamensis ‘group’ of closely-related species within the genus and can be identified by a combination of characters including: possession of dark preopercular marking; four parallel, ventrally-inclined bars on each flank (normally visible only when the fish are stressed, spawning or preserved); dark lateral spot positioned within the second vertical bar; caudal fin red with variable pattern of large, iridescent blue to white spo…

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Chalceus macrolepidotus

Pink-tailed Chalceus

March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm

This species can look quite stunning when cared for properly. It can sometimes be a little delicate when initially imported, as it has very large scales which tend to fall off during transport. Once acclimatised, it usually proves fairly hardy. There are reports of aquarium specimens surviving for over fifteen years in well-maintained conditions….

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'Puntius' lineatus (DUNCKER, 1904)

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…

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Ladigesia roloffi GÉRY, 1968

Jelly Bean Tetra

March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm

This species is sometimes referred to as ‘Sierra Leone dwarf characin’ and is the only member of its genus which can be distinguished from other alestids by lacking dorsal scales anterior to the adipose-fin insertion.

The family Alestidae is the most spe…

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Barbodes lateristriga (VALENCIENNES, 1842)

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.

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Brycinus longipinnis (GÜNTHER, 1864)

Long-finned Tetra

March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm

Not imported all that often, this species seems to ship quite poorly. Once acclimatised, it usually proves quite hardy. A big shoal of adults can look stunning in the right setting.

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Barbonymus schwanefeldii (BLEEKER, 1854)

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.

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Pethia ticto (HAMILTON, 1822)

Ticto Barb

March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm

Apparently most abundant in shallow streams and minor tributaries, sometimes at relatively high altitudes, and apparently shows a preference for substrates of mud or silt. Given the extent of its range it would seem sensible to assume that it inhabits various habitat-types which also vary in water depth, flow, and turbidity depending on the time of year.

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Arnoldichthys spilopterus (BOULENGER, 1909)

African Red-eyed Tetra

March 13th, 2012 — 1:19pm

Endemic to Nigeria, where it occurs in the Ogun and lower Niger river systems. Despite its popularity in the aquarium hobby it’s relatively scarce in the wild and is known from less than 10 localities, all lying in an area where deforestation and pollution are uncontrolled and continue to occur extensively.

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