Harman Patil (Editor)

Cherry barb

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Cypriniformes

Genus
  
Puntius

Higher classification
  
Puntius

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Cyprinidae

Scientific name
  
Puntius titteya

Rank
  
Species

Cherry barb wwwseriouslyfishcomwpcontentuploads201203P

Similar
  
Puntius, Tiger barb, Rosy barb, Barbus, Kuhli loach

Best community fish the cherry barb


The cherry barb (Puntius titteya) is a tropical fish belonging to the spotted barb genus of the family Cyprinidae. It is native to Sri Lanka, and introduced populations have become established in Mexico and Colombia. The cherry barb was named Puntius titteya by Paules Edward Pieris Deraniyagala in 1929. Synonyms include Barbus titteya and Capoeta titteya.

Contents

Cherry barb Cherry Barb Puntius titteya Tim39s Tropical Fish and Aquariums

The species is commercially important in the aquarium trade, and it is in danger of being overfished for this industry.

Cherry barb Cherry barb Puntius titteya Fish Tanks and Ponds

Species profile 6 the cherry barb punitius titteya


Description

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The cherry barb is an elongated fish with a relatively compressed body. It reaches 5 cm (1.969 in.) in length. It is fawn-colored on top with a slight greenish sheen. Its sides and belly have gleaming silver highlights. A horizontal stripe extends from the tip of the snout through the eye to the base of the caudal fin. The male is more of a deeper red than the female, becoming very deep red in color when breeding. The dominant male often has the darker colors a down the sides as the females have two pinkish color stripes down their sides also becoming darker when ready to breed.

Habitat

Cherry barb A guide on caring for Cherry barbs with discussions

The cherry barb's natural habitat is a heavily shaded, shallow, and calm water body. Its native substrate is silty with leaf cover. It comes from a tropical climate and prefers water with a pH of 6 to 8, a water hardness (dH) of 5 to 19, and a temperature range of 73°F to 81°F (23°C to 27°C).

In the aquarium

Cherry barb Cherry Barb Puntius titteya Red Cherry Barb Fish Guide

The fish is most often kept in community tanks by aquarium hobbyists. The cherry barb is a schooling fish and is best kept in groups of five or more individuals, though the schools are often less discrete than those of other barbs. Within these schools there will most likely be hierarchy. There should be a ratio of at least two females to one male. The male will constantly harass the females to breed, and if there are multiple females, each can escape the attentions of the male for a time. The average life span is four years, with a maximum around seven years. The tank should have abundant plant material (about two-thirds to three-quarters of the tank), but the fish also needs open space to swim. It tends to hide and will often withdraw under the cover of plants. The younger male is generally peaceful, but a mature male can be aggressive when breeding. Appropriate tankmates include Rasbora and similar calm fish.

Breeding

Cherry barb Cherry Barb Aquarium Hobbyist Social Networking Community

When breeding, the male swims just behind the female, chasing away rival males. The female will spawn 200 to 300 eggs and scatter them on plants and on the substrate. It may eat its own eggs and small fry. The eggs hatch in one to two days and the fry are free-swimming after two more days. After five weeks, the hatchlings will be about 1 cm. long and easily identifiable as cherry barbs.

References

Cherry barb Wikipedia