Harman Patil (Editor)

Greenstripe barb

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Cypriniformes

Genus
  
Puntius

Higher classification
  
Puntius

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Cyprinidae

Scientific name
  
Puntius vittatus

Rank
  
Species

Greenstripe barb wwwfishbaseusimagesthumbnailsjpgtnPuvitu1jpg

Similar
  
Puntius, Puntius dorsalis, Cyprinidae, Puntius amphibius, Puntius bimaculatus

The greenstripe barb, silver barb or striped barb (Puntius vittatus) is a tropical freshwater and brackish fish belonging to the subfamily Cyprininae of the family Cyprinidae. It originates in inland waters in Asia, and is found in Pakistan, India, and Sri Lanka.

Contents

The greenstripe barb is an open water, substrate egg-scatterer, and adults do not guard the eggs.

Taxonomy

It was originally described as Puntius vittatus by F. Day in 1865, and has also been referred to in scientific literature as Barbus vittatus. The word "vittatus" means "striped lengthwise", and is pronounced "vy-TAH-tus".

Description

The fish will grow in length of up to 5 centimeters (2 inches).

Habitat

It natively inhabits ponds, streams and lakes in plains. It is often found in rice fields and is known to enter brackish water. They live in a tropical climate in water with a 6.0 - 6.5 pH, a water hardness of 8 - 15 dGH, and a temperature range of 68 - 75 °F (20 - 24 °C). It feeds mainly on filamentous algae and blue-green algae.

Importance to humans

The greenstripe barb is of commercial importance in the aquarium trade and is also commonly used as bait.

References

Greenstripe barb Wikipedia