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Characins and their Relatives (Characoids).
When we talk about "Characins"
we're using an old-fashioned term to describe
tetras and their kin. If we were being consistent,
we'd call them "Characids." In
the Tree of Life Web Project, the Characiform fishes are described, and
the relationships among their 14 or 16 families
(still under hot debate) are laid out in
the kind of genealogical chart called "cladistics".
Spawning characins. Getting tetras to spawn can be a very demanding
feat, or it can be quite unpremeditated.
It all depends on which tetra. In 1998 I
put eight Black Neons, Hyphessobrycon herbertaxelrodi, in a 33 gallon tall tank to help the initial
cycling. The aquarium was fitted out with
lots of Mopane roots and quite densely planted.
Sadly, the adults developed a bacterial disease
that attacked their central nervous system;
one after another they succumbed, and I had
to net them out. I settled down to let the
tank continue cycling properly, but on the
19th day after the doomed tetras had been
introduced, I noticed the first of what turned
out to be eight fry, lurking under leaves
and darting out to attack a copepod or other
all-but-microscopic organism. So I was reminded
that some tetras can virtually spawn themselves.
Penguin Tetras (Thayeria boehlkei), for another example, first spawned for
me among Anubias leaves, right in a quarantine
tank.
There's a laid-back account of classic characin
spawning (Flame Tetras, Hyphessobrycon flammeus, in this case), by Oleg Kiselev at www.thekrib.com. The usual elements are all here: a clean
all-glass 10 gal. tank without substrate,
but with the bottom covered (with peat and
Java Moss) "leaving just about no parts
of the bottom accessible to the adult fish,"
with very soft water with peat filtration
resulting in acidic pH, and live food. The
newly free-swimming fry get a good nutritional
start browsing the biofilm on the Java Moss,
and graduate to brine shrimp nauplii. If
you'll cover the whole bottom of a tank with
Java Moss, some tetra fry will grow to maturity
even in a community tank, I've found.
Veteran aquarist Al Castro offered "Ten
steps to breeding tetras" at the Aquarium Fish website.
Robert J. Goldstein pared away some myth
and mystique about spawning characins in
an article "Breeding Neon Tetras"
in Aquarium Fish July 2000, pp 36-41. R/o, distilled or de-ionized
water all serve as well as rainwater, he
pointed out. Peat moss soaking in a bucket
provides him the blackwater component, but
alder berries, which some German aquarists
use to acidify the water, seemed to him to
have no effect. He too uses Java Moss as
a spawning medium, which also absorbs unwanted
wastes, nutrients and toxins, and later will
provide a grazing ground for the smallest
fry. He paints three sides of his 10-gallon
spawning tanks to provide the dim secure
environment that encourages spawning, but
you could substitute brown wrapping paper.
He separates the sexes and feeds live foods.
Goldstein's fish didn't spawn the very next
day: "My fish didn't read the books,"
he says. Instead he left his group of six
together four or five days, till he spotted
the first glass-like fry clinging to the
glass. Then he removed his spawners, even
though the females still looked swollen.
That seems a pretty sensible touch, rather
than trying to wait for spawning to be "over."
Apparently the bottom of his spawning tank
gets loosely littered with peat moss sediment,
which may provide some extra cover for eggs
and larvae. The article is full of detail,
but the message is reassuringly simple, "that
it can be done regularly with little effort."
In Hawaii, the Center for Tropical and Sub-Tropical
Aquaculture posts an article on commercial
spawning procedures for Hyphessobrycon serpæ, titled "Spawning and production of the Serpae
Tetra." Though the text is slanted towards encouraging
the nascent Hawaiian fishfarming industry,
there are details here that will interest
you. Make a note of the other articles there,
on Tinfoil Barbs or raising Arowana. Most
fishkeepers don't know this site.
Characin link. The one outstanding website devoted to the
Characins— with some other softwater fishes—
is Randy Carey's site, www.characin.com. Randy's fishroom is a daydreamer's ideal;
ranks of 20 gallon long tanks, each typically
containing some tetras, some pyrrhulins (the
"Splash Tetras") and some Apistos.
Check the posted list of fishes Randy has
successfully bred since 1991. Fanatic dedication
pays off: Randy's characins breed in 98%
reverse osmosis water, for a start. Don't
miss his article "Spawning and raising
Tetras, Barbs and Rasboras" at the site.
I think it's the best, most detailed advice
ever given for spawning any of these soft-water
egg scatterers.
Carnegiella strigata (Marbled Hatchetfish). There are two subspecies of this surface-hugging
hatchetfish, one from pools and small side
streams in the upper Amazon, where Peru,
Colombia and Brazil come together, the other
from Guyana and Suriname. Every aspect of
their structure identifies them as fishes
that haunt the surface. In natural surroundings
most of their food consists of insects that
have fallen on the water and the smallest
water-dwelling crustaceans. So, though they're
very good about eating flake food, they'll
thrive better if you supplement the flakes
with some freeze-dried bloodworms or daphnia,
or some live fruit flies. They're uneasy
kept in solitude. They love some current
and will hang out together in the filter
outflow. You know what jumpers the hatchetfish
are; sometimes they have been called "freshwater
flying fish." If you're keeping hatchetfish,
drop your water level several inches to give
them some headroom, and give them some reassuring
floating plant cover, using Water Sprite,
for example. With the security of shade,
they'll show more subtle tints in their scheme
of a silver belly shading to olive-brown
back overlaid with dark streaks and marbling.
I generally leave my tanks alone as much
as I can, keep my paws out of the water and
let them get on with whatever they're doing,
but fishes that jump out at the first opportunity,
before I even do anything to alarm them... well they make
me skitterish too. Nobody around here seems
to breed hatchetfish consistently, and in
the U.S. we still rely on wild-caught stock,
though Singapore supplies European fishkeepers.
Chilodus punctatus (Spotted Headstander). ("kye-LO-dus:" toothy lips) Here's
an underestimated fish that's widely distributed
in the weedy backwaters of the Amazon basin,
in the Tocantins, Rio Negro and the Orinoco,
even in Guyana, where it was first collected
"from the standing waters of the savanna"
in the 1840s. The various populations have
some local differences. It's a biofilm grazer
like the Nannostomus species, and it needs to be constantly supplied
with some vegetable supplement. Chilodus punctatus has sometimes suffered from getting confused
with a moderately closely-related headstander,
Abramites, which does have a well-founded aggressive
reputation. I have found these shy and gentle
fish to be subtly competitive among themselves,
not unlike Nannostomus. Though the Baensch Atlas (v.I, 318) says that they're found in schools,
I notice a change in their behavior within
a few days, even with shipments that have
arrived in dealers' tanks. Schooling is largely
a fright reaction, I think. Perhaps the fin-flaring
and body-shimmying that I witness may just
presage early jockeying towards some pre-nuptial
condition. Surely they're much more interesting
if you keep them in a group of three or four,
well matched for size.
Chilodus punctatus has been very occasionally bred in aquaria--—
Rolf Geisler gave an account in TFH as long ago as Aug. 1959--— but not yet
on a commercial scale. Not enough market
pressure for them, I imagine. In the U.S.
at least, the fishes you buy are likely to
be wild-caught. They will probably arrive
home starving, but too frightened to eat.
Try to avoid purchasing individuals with
very flat, knife-thin abdomens. They may
be suffering from intestinal nematodes, too,
so they bear careful watching in a full-length
quarantine that includes pre-emptivede-worming
medication.
The fish are at home in a well-planted aquarium,
with open space to move around in but some
dark shadowed places near at hand, suitable
for a moment's refuge, and with the added
security of drifting green plants overhead.
Soft water filtered with some peat is preferred.
Tannins and low pH tend to reduce the bacterial
load; these fish are prone to finrot and
intestinal problems if they don't have constant
greens. In sympathetic surroundings, the
silver of their body color will become suffused
with rosy golden and olive tones as they
mature. A photograph at a Norwegian aquaristic website gives
a good impression. Each scale has a warm
black botch at its base and is delicately
outlined with black to create a subtle all-over
reticulated patterning. The bold lateral
stripe is inky black. The eye is rosy red.
But it's the obliquely vertical stance of
these fishes that makes them memorable. It
isn't easy to keep Chilodus punctatus in robust condition; they will take flake
food and algae wafers,
but they need to have
some live food to
supplement it, and vegetables
to supplement their
algal pickings. And they
won't thrive with
boisterous tankmates.
Links. Aside from abbreviated entries in fish species,
there's not much. The Aquaworld website has some useful detail.
Hemigrammus bleheri (Rummynose Tetra). Randy Carey has updated his 1993 article,
"The Three Species of Rummy-Nose Tetra"
at his website, with his additional notes:
www.characin.com If you're interested in these tetras with
a reputation for being delicate, that's the
first place to look.
If you're looking for a consistently schooling
tetra, the Rummynoses fill the bill. Conversely,
don't keep them in groups of fewer than six.
Hemigrammus erythrozonus (Glowlight Tetra). Erythro does mean "red," but the brilliant
eyelight and body bar of a Glowlight Tetra
can vary from clear bright red to the pink
of highly-polished new-minted pure copper.
Otherwise, the fish is a fairly translucent
brownish, with a silvery white belly. There's
a red leading edge to the base of the dorsal
fin. Peat filtration and a dark woody background
bring out the touches of icy white at the
leading edges and tips of fins. What small
mouths they have. The fishes max out at about
an inch and three-quarters, with females
notably more robust.
These beauties were first noticed in a temporary
overflow pool in the floodbottom of the Rio
Mazaruni, in Guyana (then British Guiana).
H. erythrozonus are also found in the Potaro and the Essequibo
rivers; in other words they're well-distributed
through the central watersheds of Guyana.
They were formally published to science in
1909, but they didn't get exported til 1933.
Glowlights for the market are all bred now
in Singapore.
Spawning doesn't quite follow standard tetra procedure,
in that the male performs an enticing courting
dance for the female, blocking her movements
to give her shimmying broadside displays.
If she's ready to accept him, their excited
fin-flicking movements will build to a climactic
side-to-side barrel roll in which about a
dozen eggs get extruded in a burst. The eggs
will be eaten as soon as spawning heat has
cooled, so be prepared to remove the pair.
A good trick is to provide a removable screen
divider, with plenty of Java Moss all on
one side, where the slightly tacky eggs will
stick. With the divider, you can separate
the pair for a day or two beforehand, and
then screen them from their eggs caught up
in the moss afterwards. Though Glowlights
will even spawn in water with a pH slightly
above neutral, they have a reputation for
not being very forthcoming about spawning.
They mature early and spawn only while they're
young. In my soft water, flirting pairs form
even in a planted community aquarium, so
I think the problem of reluctance to spawn
may be in the hardness of the water. When
I'm told that the extremely tiny eggs will
swell once they're out in open water, I'm
reminded that the water has a lower molarity
than the fluids in the fishes' ovary. So
it occurs to me that reports of hard water
reducing fertility of spawnings might have
some connection to impaired osmotic reaction
of the egg membrane when water is not very
soft. If your Glowlights are resisting spawning,
see whether you might encourage them by doing
a part water change with some distilled water.
Within a month of hatching, well-fed fry
will start to show iridescence. They look
like a cloud of sparks, if you can have them
against a dark woody background.
Animal researcher Grant E Brown and his co-workers
have been investigating Glowlight Tetras'
reaction to the alarm pheromones that tetras
exude when they are attacked or harmed. The
effects of an unidentified characoid "fright
substance" have been recognized for
decades, but recently the actual molecule
has been tentatively identified. Alarm pheromones
are produced by all Ostariophysii, the giant
group of fishes that includes catfishes as
well as tetras. In a series of experiments
starting in the 1990s, the researchers showed
that H. erythrozonus even detected the fright substance exuded from
predatory Cichlasoma that had recently dined
on tetras. Their alarm responses included
increased shoaling, more restricted cruising
the tank, more hesitancy about inspecting
the cichlid. And "fin-flicking:"
if you know Glowlights and some other tetras,
you'll recognize the action of "fin-flicking,"
but you probably didn't identify it as an
alarm display to alert other Glowlights—
nor did you imagine that the twitching gesture
had some deterrent effect on potential predators.
If fin-flickings are important communicating
gestures, that would give a purpose to the
leading edges of Glowlight fins being heightened
with white. Abstracts of Grant Brown's articles
are posted at http://www1.union.edu/~browng/; follow links to "Publications."
Hyphessobrycon herbertaxelrodi (Black Neon). I keep Black Neons in my somewhat generic
"Amazon" aquarium, even though
they aren't fishes of the Amazon Basin; in
fact, Black Neons come from the Mato Grosso,
far to the south in Brazil, in the Rio Taquari,
which is part of the Paraguay drainage. The
area was for long inaccessible even to a
cargo plane, so remote that Hyphessobrycon herbertaxelrodi didn't arrive in the U.S.A. until 1960.
The clunky name honoring Dr. Axelrod set
off a tiresome modern fad for flattering
v.i.p.s with attaching their complete names
to new species: why not "doctorherbertraxelrodi" while you're at it, eh?
When they were first imported, Black Neons
seemed to require soft water and peat filtration,
but they have settled down in captivity.
Any that you may see are captive bred, and
no one thinks of Black Neons as especially
delicate and demanding tetras any more. In
fact, if they are well-fed, and not too jostled
and distracted by other species, Black Neons
will spawn casually in a community tank,
if water is soft and pH is slightly acidic.
Peat filtration will help. You'll see them
sporting and chasing in the evening, and
in the morning, unless you're up at dawn,
it will all be over: the females will be
slender once more and the eggs will have
all disappeared.
The patterns and the colors or transparency
of fishes is never arbitrary. We know that
selection by predators and by sexual attraction
have shaped these animals. But I was vividly
reminded of the survival value of Black Neons'
patterning one afternoon when I was watching
them dashing back and forth in a shaft of
sunlight. The upper body of this fish is
all but transparent. The bold irridescent
green stripe down the center of the fishes'
flank marks a sharp upper edge to a black
streak that counter-shades away below to
a silvery white belly. I suddenly compared
the fish in sunlight to a small shiny horizontal
leaf with a blinding band of sunlight across
it and its top facing me in shadow. How unfishlike
the camouflaged Black Neon appears. Then
it turns away to flee and disappears, like
a deep-keeled cardboard fish-shaped cutout
that's suddenly been turned end-on! What
is a predatory fish presented with? —a flash
of irridescent green, like a leaf surface
caught in sunlight, then a snap disappearance!
Though they tend to shoal together, a slight
degree of intra-specific aggression keeps
H. herbertaxelrodi from acting in unison as a true school.
Hyphessobrycon (Paracheirodon) innesi (Neon Tetra). In 1936 visitors to the Shedd Aquarium in
Chicago lined up to view exotic Neon Tetras
for the first time. The fish had been collected
in the Amazon and shipped to Germany. Then
they were flown back across the Atlantic
in the dirigible airship Hindenburg.
Neon Tetras are now many generations removed
from the clear and blackwater streams where
they were first discovered and exported.
Their home territory is the lower Putumayo
River and the Leticia-Tabatinga district
where the borders of Peru, Colombia and Brazil
come together along the upper Amazon. They
can be found as far down the Amazon drainage
as São Paulo de Olivença. For years, while
Neon Tetras were being flown out of Leticia,
the exact locality from which they were being
collected was kept tightly controlled as
a "trade secret;" it was even withheld
from the scientists who formally described
them. The location wasn't revealed til about
1960.
All but a tiny percentage of Neons on the
U.S. market now come from Hong Kong, where
cooler weather encourages more prolific breeding
than in Malaysia and Singapore. In a brief
1998 bio of Neon Tetras by Dr. William Fink's
biology student at U. of Michigan, Emily
Couture, (now deleted from the Web), she
emphasized how little is known about Neon
Tetras in their native habitat, and incidentally
remarked on the disease susceptibility of
mass-produced Neons that are farmed in continuously
medicated water in southeast Asia.
In 1998 Prof. Frank Chapman and some colleagues
at the University of Florida wrote an article
"Controlled spawning of the neon tetra"
in the journal Progressive Fish Culturist, to encourage Florida fish farmers to take
up the domestic production of this popular
species. Robert J. Goldstein spoke to Prof.
Chapman while doing preparation for his article,
"Breeding Neon Tetras" for Aquarium Fish July 2000, and Chapman expanded on his published
thoughts about why Neons were such meager
producers, when aquarists got them to spawn.
Chapman thinks that the Asian fish are fed
chow laced with testosterone, a common "color
enhancer." The testosterone makes the
young fishes color up prematurely, so that
they're marketable at barely half an inch,
whereas unjuiced juveniles don't begin to
show their colors til they are a bit larger.
Chapman thinks that testosterone is decreasing
females' fertility. Of course, once you have
raised your own tank-bred Neon Tetras, female
fertility will be back to normal in the next
generation. So, the next time you're at a
club auction event, you might consider paying
a premium for a member's tank-raised Neon
Tetras.
But good news follows Chapman's work at the
University of Florida; much healthier neons
from Florida fish farms are beginning to
come onto the U.S. retail market. A January
2001 U. of Florida press release announced that the breeding "secrets"
were slightly acidic, soft water at 77oF. Hmm. No surprises for you there!
Mike Edwardes gives a useful report on breeding
neons at his website.
Nannostomus marginatus (Striped Pencilfish). I don't know why I haven't explored the
Nannostomus more. There are some fifteen
species of Nannostomus, members of the Lebiasinidae,
which makes them close relatives of Characins.
All of them have long cylindrical bodies
and the "tiny mouths" their name
specifies. Adults reach almost 2 inches,
and, in a flattering reversal, they grow
larger for us in aquaria than they are found
in nature. Probably they live longer in aquaria,
too, under the right conditions. All the
Nannostomus have a reputation for being delicate,
when they don't have the clean, soft, acidic
waters they require. Variable Nannostomus marginatus populations are found in the mid- to lower
Amazon, Rio Negro and Orinoco river systems,
in the upper Amazon basin of Peru, and in
the Guianas too. There is a separate population
of N. trifasciatus with a distinct ocellated spot in the tailfin
in the Rio Apeu, near Boa Vista, Para, Brazil.
They have been collected in shoreline reaches
of the Amazon itself, but they more characteristically
range up into small shaded tributary streams,
the kind of forest environment that is most
under attack from short-term speculative
forestry and cattle-ranching. "Most
of the species with wide distributions are
geographically somewhat variable regarding
life color patterns, scale counts and sometimes
vertebral counts," wrote characin guru
Stanley Weitzman in a Tropical Fish Hobbyist article, May 2001, "Nannostomus marginatus and a related coral red form;" this
is the most useful print article on this
species and a public introduction to the
newly found coral red form.
Perhaps Nannostomus marginatus are the most beautiful Nannostomus. Mine
seem to be from the Rio Negro population,
a silvery gold with clean black stripes,
with small flecks of nail-polish red. The
clear parts of the fins reflect a skim-milk
bluish sheen in reflected light. Alpha males
in competition flush rosy red. At night the
fishes take on a different, protective coloration,
drab gray with three vertical dark blotches.
In an aquarium that combines small open spaces
with dense surface tangles they lose their
shyness, but they wouldn't thrive with really
boisterous tankmates. They always keep that
dash-and-freeze behavior that is so characteristic
of fry and of many small fishes. The floating
tangles in my aquarium are important, for
that is where Nannostomus prefer to deposit
their spawn, I hear. They hold a station
below a leaf or in the pendant roots of Water
Sprite, from which they rush out to challenge
their conspecifics with fin extensions and
broadside shimmying. If that doesn't work,
vigorous body-slamming is called for. Though
no harm is done, no permanent pecking-order
seems to get established either. This behavior
has overtones of pre-nuptial jockeying, but
I haven't caught mine in the act. Quite often,
schooling behavior is reported: in the Baensch Atlas, for example, or in a capsule bio by U.
of Michigan Biology student Mara Zimmerman
that's unfortunately been deleted at http://www.umich.edu/bio440/ —but I'm convinced this is shoaling, not
schooling, a fear reaction that is a temporary
artefact of laboratory conditions. The schooling
behavior I mean. All that remains of Mara
Zimmerman's good brief report, with a bibliography,
is the best photo portrait of N. trifasciatus on the web.
Currently I have two rival males and four
plump females in a densely-planted 10-gallon
tank. One male keeps the females loosely
herded in a harem. The other male challenges.
The females don't seem to have any strong
loyalties. The spawnings are eaten by Melania
snails before they hatch. It took me months
to figure that out.
Randy Carey also has beautiful close-ups
of this photogenic fish, and a well-written
brief article, at www.characin.com. My fishes have the red mid-body splotch
he takes as a mark of N. marginatus. Stanley Weitzman and Richard Vari say,
"Complex distribution patterns, active
speciation, and variable chromosome counts
make this a challenging genus for taxonomists,
and species limits are ill-defined."
(in Paxton and Eschmeyer's Encyclopedia of Fishes, 2nd ed., 1998, p102). No doubt some inadvertent
further blurring of Nannostomus populations
has taken place in the aquarium world.
The T.F.H. article I mentioned was occasioned by the
first importation, in late November 2000,
by Julio Melgar of Acuario Nanay, of some
N. marginatus in which courting males flushed a strong
red. The new find comes from small streams
in the mid reaches of Rio Nanay, near the
village of Albarenga, and from tributaries
of Rio Tigre, near Santa Helena, in the province
of Loreto, Peru, west of Iquitos, whence
these wonderful fishes are being shipped.
The males display even to their mirror reflections,
and the coral red color fades when they aren't
in displaying mood. In courting, the male
approaches the female from behind with his
anal fin spread wide so as to cup it round
the female's vent, concentrating his sperm
round the shed egg, which improves chances
of fertilization.
Spawning N. harrisoni. Randy Carey describes his set-up in "Randy's Fishroom."
Paracheirodon axelrodi (Cardinal Tetra). The only question is, what's the second most glorious tetra, right?
Their home waters in the upper Orinoco, Rio
Vaupes and northern tributaries of Rio Negro
aren't the tannic blackwaters of traditional
aquarists' lore after all, it appears, but
instead shaded clearwaters. Softness counts
when you're trying to please Cardinal Tetras,
and the pH can drop below 6.0. The limestone
waters of Florida will never suit them for
breeding: in the U.S.A. these fish are still
eluding the mass manufacturers and come in,
wild-caught, somewhat seasonally, from the
mid-reaches of the Rio Negro. In Europe,
however, they are bred for the market. Even
at home, if you can't give them the very
soft, acidic water they need, they'll never
show their most intense color for you. The
golden cast of peat filtration, some patches
of shade from floating plants and a dark
woody background, such as natural corkbark,
present Cardinal Tetras at their best. A
school is a must, or they'll be disoriented
and shy.
These fishes first were first discovered
in 1952 by Harold Sioli in a tributary of
Rio Negro. In the winter of 1955-56 the first
shipment of them was sent to New York, flown
out from Manaus by the largest exporter,
Paramount, who were pioneers in shipping
Amazonian fishes by hydroplane. The new species
was about to be formally named Hyphessobrycon cardinalis by Dr. George S. Myers (of Stanford) and
Weitzman. But lo! the publication date of
a newcomer magazine, Tropical Fish Hobbyist, was advanced by a few days, so that a rival
scientific name honoring its publisher gained
precedence. The ensuing dispute went all
the way to the International Commission on
Zoological Nomenclature before it was settled!
In Europe, the market is supplied by breeders
in the Czech Republic. Wild stock for the
U.S. market are still collected around Barcelos
on the mid Rio Negro about 430 km from Manaus,
and exported from Manaus, where the Rio Negro
joins the Amazon. The fishing season coincides
with low water levels from October to February.
The Cardinal Tetra is the indicator species
for the ornamental fish trade in the middle
Rio Negro basin. During the severe El Nino
event of the 1990s, drought in the Rio Negro
basin dried up populations of Cardinal Tetras
in all the accessible creeks and igapes,
causing some consternation in eco-circles,
but after the rains returned, the natural
populations bounced back in two seasons.
The general lesson is, few tetras survive
to maturity in nature. Cardinal Tetras are
virtually annual fish, though they live for
five years or so in an aquarium.
Broader concerns, about the sustainability
of the ornamental fishing trade that is founded
on Cardinal Tetras, (which still represent
some 80% of exported Rio Negro fishes), and
the social impact of the trade, are being
studied by the Projeto Piaba, begun as a
biological inquiry in 1989 but working now
to develop a responsible sustainable Rio
Negro ornamental fishery. You might be interested
in reading about the Project and the Rio
Negro fishing community at the Projeto Piaba website.
In Cardinal Tetras from the Rio Negro, the
iridescent blue-green line ends at the base
of the little adipose fin. In Rio Orinoco
populations, the stripe ends short of the
adipose fin, with a red streak that's noticeably
wider in the caudal peduncle.
In the Rio Negro there are also some "blond"
or "golden" Cardinals, more curious
than desirable, in my opinion.
There are some discussions of Cardinal Tetras
in Conservation and Management of Ornamental
Fish Resources in the Rio Negro Basin, 2001 (proceedings of an international workshop
on Amazon River Biodiversity at St. Louis,
1999). I can't nail down a dependable link,
but a google.com search for the key words
will find it.
Besides Cardinal Tetras and Neons, a third
look-alike tetra is Hyphessobrycon (Paracheirodon) simulans,
rarely seen. But if you know what you're
looking for, you might pick out a few as
"contaminants" in a tank of imported
Cardinals or Neons..
Thayeria boehlkei (Penguin Tetra). Thayer, for whom the genus is named, was
the underwriter of the Amazon expedition
of 1865-66, which had for its geologist-biologist
the famous Louis Agassiz. Agassiz was more
than an ichthyologist; in his youth he made
his public reputation expounding the fresh
idea that there had been an "Ice Age,"
and in time Agassiz lived to become the last
widely-respected professional biologist to
resist the concept of evolution. The species
name is for J.E. Bohlke, an ichthyologist
at Philadelphia's Academy of Sciences.
This species is from Rio Araguaia and also
from the upper Amazon basin in Peru, but
the fish you'll buy have been shipped from
Thailand or Singapore.
When this tetra came on the U.S. market it
was confused with another, T. sanctæ-mariæ, and the mistaken identity persisted for
years. When it's at rest, this fish has an
unusual up-slanted posture that's emphasized
by the black lower lobe of its caudal fin.
Does the slanting black stripe and blot make
its outline read as less fishlike to a predator,
I wonder? These bold fish are competitive
with each other, but in all the mutual chasing
I've yet to see a fin torn. If you think
of tetras as pure carnivores, like mini-Piranhas,
you'll be as surprised as I was to see Penguin
Tetras tear into a floating blanched spinach
leaf.
This is an easy tetra to spawn. The females
regularly fill with eggs. Pre-nuptial broadside
displays, and rushing and feinting get more
excited over a couple of days till in an
evening fishes start to pair up and make
wild dashes through the plants, with eggs
blown in every direction.
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