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Barbs
The Cyprinids (named after Cyprinus, the European Carp) are an enormously successful
family of strictly freshwater fish, with
over 340 genera and some 2000 species, found
on every continent except South America,
Australia and Antarctica. The relationships
of groups of families within two huge Cyprinid
subfamilies (Cyprininae and Leuciscinae)
are being discussed by ichthyologists, now
using conservative mitochondrial DNA sequences.
It's convenient to think of them in groups:
besides these Barbs, the Danios and Rasboras
on the following page are also Cyprinids.
The Barbs are an Asian clan that made their
way into Europe while the Ural Mountains
were being raised in Oligocene times. Some
of the oldest Cyprinid fossils date to Oligocene
strata in Central Europe. The Barbs colonized
Africa, India and Sri Lanka. In Indonesia
Barbs can be found as far east as Borneo,
but no farther.
The Barbs are omnivores, with a need for
greens. If you don't give Barbs some green
feed, like spirulina flakes or, even better,
blanched spinach leaves, they'll be reduced
to munching on the decor. Just give them
zucchini slices and they'll leave the Hygrophila
alone. Barbs devour duckweed even faster
than it grows.
Breeding links. A good basic description of setting up to
breed barbs is laid out by Albert Thiel at
Master Index of Tropical Fishes.
The Center for Tropical and Subtropical Aquaculture
(CTSA) at the University of Hawaii, cooperating
with the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
posts an e-manual packed with information on commercial breeding
of Tiger Barbs, in order to encourage the
nascent aquarium fish farming industry in
Hawaii. For example, I've seen here that
using a stiff spawning brush reduces the number of eggs
that get eaten! And there's some material
on the regrettable intentional hybridization
of Barbs in the trade too!
Mike Edwardes keeps excellent illustrated
Tiger Barb breeding notes at his webite,
"Mike Edwardes Tropicals."
And don't miss Randy Carey's article "Spawning
and raising Tetras, Barbs and Rasboras"
at his site www.characin.com.
Breeding. Here's how I'd set up to spawn easy barbs,
such as Tiger Barbs. Give them a 10-gal.
tank. If you can set it in an east-facing
window where early sunlight will strike it,
all the better. Reassure the rest of your
family that this is quite temporary. Set
up your tank with some aged gravel. Cut a
rectangle of plastic netting with about half-inch
mesh to fit the bottom of the tank, and support
it with lengths of plastic tubing or whatever,
so that it sits about an inch off the gravel.
Add some floating stem plants like Elodea
or Ambulia or some chunks of floating corkbark
with streamers of Java Moss.
Use a very well-cycled sponge filter from
an established planted tank that hasn't had
any disease in it. Fill the tank with water
from the barb's home aquarium mixed about
half-and-half with de-chlorinated water.
The aquarium should be "instantly"
cycled. To make sure, add a few drops of
ammonia til it just registers on your test
kit. Test again in 24 hours for ammonia and
nitrite. If both ammonia and nitrite are
undetectable, you're ready to go. If not,
you have to wait until the cycle is complete.
Put the fullest, most robust female into
the tank. Let her settle a couple of days
and feed her lightly on live foods (you don't
want flakes drifting down among the gravel).
Now add the liveliest male with the reddest
snout. Raise the temperature two degrees
every day, til the temperature stands at
80ºF. Keep a watch on your pair: they
lead up to the act with increased chasing,
which the female initiates almost as much
as the male. They nip at each other's anal
fins and they can find themselves nose-to-tail,
chasing each other til they're spinning down
towards the gravel. They may just spawn without
any more encouragement. If they haven't,
do this: in the evening, just before "lights
out," do a 50% water change with cooler
water, dropping the tank temperature quite
quickly as low as 74º. Cover the tank
with a towel. In the morning, remove the
towel, and they'll spawn in the sunlight,
probably within a couple of hours. (If they
don't spawn that day, start raising the temperature
again and repeat the process.) Pale sticky
eggs, no bigger than a dot, will fly everywhere.
The spawners will eat many of them, especially
as they finish spawning. Net the pair out.
The eggs are invisible down among the gravel.
The eggs will hatch in about two days. Before
they hatch, do another 50% water change,
to remove the milt that would otherwise start
to be broken down by fungi and bacteria.
This would be the time to color the water
with methylene blue, to forestall fungus,
but you have to change it out, for the newly-hatched
fry are sensitive to it. Once the fry are
free-swimming, start to feed them on vinegar
eels and microworm for a few days, til they're
all taking newly-hatched brine shrimp. The
benthic fauna that has colonised the sponge
filter, and more protozoans along the strands
of Java Moss will also provide food for the
newly free-swimming fry.
Puntius (lateristriga x) everetti (Clown Barb). P. lateristriga was described in 1842 by Valenciennes. Boulenger
named P. everetti in 1894 to honor its discoverer. Have these
two similar species been carelessly hybridized
in captivity?
The "Clown Barb," Puntius everetti, has caused confusion since it was first
imported, initially to Hamburg on the eve
of World War I, then to New York, where it
was miscalled "Barbus lateristriga" until the "real" B. lateristriga turned up in 1932. The English called this
the "Spanner Barb." The confusion
is excusable, for both these barbs have crisp
silver and black juvenile patterns but develop
more blurred and colorful mature patterning.
Even the ichthyologists have been misled:
in 1957 Klausewitz declared that a "Barbus zelleri" that had been described by Ahl was identical
with a juvenile P. lateristriga.
But I think that captive-bred populations
of the Clown Barb, "Puntius everetti of aquariums" have also been carelessly
hybridized to some extent with Puntius lateristriga. And then there's just the possibility that
these two similar barbs, with overlapping
natural distributions and interchangeable
fin and scale counts, were never genuine
separate species in the first place. Gunther
Sterba 1967 gave completely overlapping fin
formulas for P. everetti and P. lateristriga, two Barbs that occur widely in overlapping
populations on the Malay Peninsula, on Sumatra,
Java, and Borneo, and on some smaller islands
that remain in the now-drowned watershed
of the vast Ice Age river paleogeographers
call the Sunda River, which joined all these
areas into a single freshwater drainage basin
as recently as 8000 years ago. (See maps
at the Field Museum's website.)
V.P. Vasiliev wrote an article, "Chromosome
numbers in fish-like vertebrates and fish"
in the Journal of Ichthyology, 1980, v. 20(3), pp 1-38, mentioning these
two species. But Maurice Kottelat, A.J. Whitten,
S.N. Kartikasari and S. Wirjoatmodjo, in
Freshwater fishes of Western Indonesia and
Sulawesi, 1993, reckoned them separate genuine species
in the wild.
P. lateristriga is naturally found from Thailand and the
islands of Sumatra and Java to the western
drainages of Borneo, in clear mountain streams
strewn with rocks and boulders, often below
waterfalls. That habitat description should
suggest that the advice you generally hear,
which is to keep these fishes slightly on
the warm side, 76-84º, might be keeping
these fishes a little too warm. They'd appreciate
some extra current and plenty of surface
oxygen exchange. And though they'll school
loosely as youngsters, as they mature they
turn into solitary hiders. In their natural
habitat they can get to 18cm. (Puntius everetti remains a smaller fish, to 10cm.) Females
will fill with eggs after a year, but males
take about 18 months to reach sexual maturity.
I inherited a mature male about 10 cm. total
length. His scaleless head, with two pairs
of barbels, is a dusty purple-brown; his
back shades to olive, each scale with a mushroom-colored
edging. His flanks are overcast with an iridescent
yellow, lightly peppered with golden guanin
dusting, that shades to a silvery belly.
He has four blue-black vertical markings
of blotchy bars on his flanks and a distinctly
different horizontal scheme, a warm ink-black
horizontal streak down the flanks and blotch
on the caudal peduncle. His fins have rosy-brick
rays fading out distally and milk-white edges
to his dorsal and tail fins; the first ray
of the dorsal dorsal fin is mushroom purple-brown.
In Baensch 1, p.387, the illustration of
P. everetti shows the same four vertical blotches that
my fish has, even to the ink-black informal
ocellus that overlies the vertical band on
the caudal peduncle.
A secret to the confusing variability of
P. lateristriga lies in the two different black patternings
that are superimposed on each individual
fish. It certainly looks as though two different
genetic pathways, each coding for a black
patterning, were concerned. One sequence
appears to code for the iridocytes that form
the blue-black splotchy vertical bars. The
other sequence independently would be coding
for the melanin-produced interrupted horizontal
streaking. The two kinds of black are quite
distinct when you look at the fish.
My hunch is that when a closer look is taken,
using DNA sequencing, any attempt at a consistent
genetic distinction of captive breeding populations
of these two species will evaporate. What's
important to remember is that this little
black and silver barb is a late-bloomer that
might take 18 months to show the colors of
sexual maturity. It will need a 36 inch tank
when it reaches maturity, and it responds
to regular water changes with improved colors.
Puntius nigrofasciatus (Black Ruby Barb). Black Rubies originally came from Sri Lanka,
where the IUCN "Red List," 1998,
listed the species as "vulnerable."
Sri Lankan law technically prohibits their
export, but there isn't much official control.
According to recent surveys though, P. nigrofasciatus is common enough, within its restricted
natural habitats. And wild-collecting pressures
are lower now, because all the Black Rubies
you'll see on the market are captive-bred.
According to a report and official recommendation
made by Jonathan Mee and formerly posted
among AgEnt documents at at www.agrolanka.org,
Sri Lanka's fishes are collected by local
village collectors, or casually farmed by
farmers, who range from household groups
up to the half-dozen big fish producers who
control the export trade. Sri Lanka's fishes
have been exported to Singapore, then re-exported.
In the bare tank at your LFS, Black Ruby
Barbs are undistinguished-looking fishes
that will suffer from comparison with the
snappier Tiger Barbs in a nearby tank. Their
body color is less silvery, and their transverse
markings, blackish wedges with ragged edges,
are less crisp. (Nigrofasciatus means "black-banded.") Once you
have them settled and in good condition,
though, a transformation occurs. Now Black
Rubies will truly deserve their name: the
males' color at breeding time darkens to
a deep fiery cherry red overlaid with black,
with a bright cherry head. Competing males
display flank to flank and head to tail,
then start chasing each others' tails until
the two are spinning in the water, in an
action some biologists call "carouseling."
The breeding colors come and go with this
species-- a water change may spark them--
but even outside spawning time it's easy
to sex them: the slightly larger and more
robust females just have black bases to their
vertical fins, the males show a strong black
dorsal fin and a reddish tinge in their anal
fin.
There is a good brief entry on Puntius nigrofasciatus at AquaWorld. The illustrations give an impression of
the males' rich coloring. The FishBase entry gives a succinct description of this
species' habitat in cool shaded Sri Lankan
forest pools and streams over sandy bottoms,
where it feeds on algae and detritus and
spawns among weeds in the shallow margins.
Puntius tetrazonus (Tiger Barb). This is the barb that's usually meant when
someone just refers to their "Barbs."
Tetrazonus does mean "four bands," just as
you figured. P. tetrazonus has a natural range in Thailand and Malaya
(with a sighting or two in Cambodia) and
on Sumatra and in southern and eastern drainages
of Borneo. So here's another freshwater fish
(like some Bettas and Rasboras) with modern
surviving populations that got separated
when the sea level rose after the last Ice
Age. During the glaciation, though South
East Asia remained unglaciated and mild,
so much of the earth's water was locked up
in vast ice sheets, that the world's sea
level dropped by many meters. The South China
Sea drained away, exposing its vast flat
continental shelf. That area became a gigantic
savannah, with stretches of marshland and
coastal peat forests linking what are now
the islands of Sumatra and Java and Borneo
to the Asian mainland. Chicago's Field Museum site offers maps that show you the expanded and
linked-up river drainages in South-East Asia
during the glacial maximums. Imagine the
flat endless watery landscape of today's
lower Mekong River and its delta, then expand
it, if you can, to the scale of the Amazon
basin. Starting about 8000 years ago, sea
level began rising in fits and starts, and
separate "relict" populations of
many freshwater fishes became isolated on
the large Indonesian islands. If this is
interesting to you, you might like to see
an article describing how populations of
Arctic char got stranded in Ireland, becoming
purely freshwater fishes, as the Glacial
Age ended, at http://charrsoc.tripod.com/CurrentStatus/HowandWhy.htm
In the wild, Tiger Barbs inhabit both clear
and turbid shallow waters with a moderate
rate of flow. In the 1980s wild P. tetrazonus were collected from swampy Malayan lakes
with changable water levels and unexpectedly
high carbonate levels. In captivity, optimal
growth is at 72º-78°F, with breeding
at 75º-82°F, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture found, in the interesting
document on techniques for breeding and raising
Tiger Barbs from Hawaii's Center for Tropical and Sub-Tropical
Aquaculture. The document was developed to
help the nascent Hawaiian fish-farming industry,
but it's got information that will be interesting
to you, too.
Tiger Barbs get a bad rap for fin-nipping
and chasing slower fish, especially slow-moving
ones with long-flowing fins like Gouramis.
Keep them in a school, that's the first thing
you'll hear about them. The fact is, Tiger
Barbs form more of a pack than a school.
Within the group there's lots of competition,
which isn't limited to the males. As long
as you have 8 or 9 Tiger Barbs together,
they're completely occupied with keeping
up their own standing with the others. A
solo Tiger Barb, lonely and bored, looks
for some stimulating mutual harassment, and
the trouble starts. So keep your Tiger Barbs
in a swarm.
A stepped-up regimen of water changes will
effect a change in these fishes: snouts glow
cherry red, the males sport brilliant red
in their fins, and silver scales take on
golden tones. As Tiger Barbs age, more melanin
gets deposited in their skin. Scales develop
black edges that give them a netted look,
and in certain lights their black markings
iridesce with a green shimmer. This is called
the Tyndall effect, from the physicist who
first described how it works, and it results
from scattering of shorter lightwaves--
the blue light-- by finely-scattered reflective
particles that lie in the outer skin, above
the dark layers of melanin pigment deeper
in the dermis. Selected color varieties of Puntius tetrazonus are on the market. These are not a separate
species, or hybrids of Puntius tetrazona with another Barb: they are mutations, in
fact. There's an albino mutation-- isn't
there always an albino version?-- which
in the late 1990s began to be dipped in dyes
in the Singapore fish mills to invent a spurious
kind of "lavender barb." Aagh! Don't encourage this low practice by
purchasing such tainted fishes. But a beautiful
natural selection is the Mossy Green Barb
that was developed by Singaporean breeders.
Here for once is a domesticated selection
that has a natural look, in which the
fish produce so much extra melanin that the
black bands have joined up. In a good example--
the only kind you should buy-- there isn't
even a "saddle" of silver on the
back; only the belly remains silver, and
the snout, which darkens to cherry red when
the fish are in glowing health. And
as a result of the Tyndall effect I was telling
you about, the black areas glisten with a
strong green iridescence. These fishes would
be spectacular displayed with well-conditioned
Puntius nigrofasciatus.
Puntius titteya (Cherry Barb). The Cherry Barb is a small barb (up to 2
in.) that might not be comfortable in the
rowdier company of a mixed barb tank. It
is gentler and more retiring than many and
will choose the spots that are shaded by
some floating plants. My very soft water
and plenty of live blackworms keep them in
spawning color. Male Cherry Barbs continually
harass one another in barb fashion, but fins
are never shredded. If your tank is less
than 20 gallons and perhaps not as densely
planted as it might be, usually it's the
dominant male who will really be showing
the glowing red for which you're keeping
them. For each male Cherry Barb provide
two or three of the less colorful females.
But don't keep fewer than that.
Cherry Barbs are omnivorous, constantly tasting
the substrate with their delicate barbels.
Like all barbs, Cherry Barbs will munch on
your prized vegetation if you don't keep
them constantly supplied with greens or green
substitutes, like algae wafers.
Puntius titteya was "Red Listed" as vulnerable
by IUCN in 1998 and you keep hearing rumors
that's it's extinct in its home waters. Kai
Erik Witte said, "'Extinction' as announced
by aquarium fish exporters usually translates
into 'our local collector(s) don't catch
them any more, or the numbers are too low
to make enough profit'" at the Aquatic Conservation Network mailing-list, 30 Sept 1996. Apparently the Cherry Barb
is still locally abundant in the very restricted
habitats where it's found, in southwestern
Sri Lanka; but only ten small localities
were identified by Rohan Pethiyagoda in 1991.
These are deep forest fishes, from shallow,
clear, clean shaded forest pools and small
waterways with gentle currents. Agricultural
pollution and watershed despoliation are
more threatening to them than collecting
for aquarium trade export. Sri Lankan laws
prohibit their export, not that any Sri Lankans
would let that stand in their way, but fortunately
all our stocks are now captive bred. Of the
elegant small Sri Lankan Barbs headed for
extinction, Puntius cumingi is the one I see least often on the market
now. You'll find a link to a report about
Sri Lanka's modest fish farming culture in
the section about Barbus nigrofasciatus.
Even if you don't take the pains to protect
the eggs and raise the fry, Cherry Barbs
are very willing to spawn for you. The night
I wrote this I'd spent several hours watching
two males and four females spawning in a
densely-planted 10-gallon tank. Do the males
drive the females, as male aquarists have
always described it, or is it the females
who test male vigor by leading them on? Feinting
and dashing, the males follow closely through
every twist and turn among the plants, rising
from behind to nudge the females' vents.
Together they dive through thick tangles
of Java Moss and deposit eggs that are too
small for me to see. Though the females eat
eggs, the males are especially avid in hunting
them down and eating them in the intervals
between spawning runs, and the males take
some moments out too for brief bouts of competitive
sparring. In breeding dress they are suffused
with strong cherry red, and their black lateral
stripe fades. The ripe females show a tinge
of red in every fin, but especially the anal
fin, with its hairline black border, and
their shining white bellies are prominent.
Jacklyn McNaughton of the Regina Aquarium
Society has bred these barbs. Her brief description
is archived at http://www.cableregina.com/nonprofits/ras/ariticles/fish03.htm
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