Cherry Barb vs Tarpon
Puntius titteya verglichen mit Megalops atlanticus
Taxonomy & Classification
| Eigenschaft | Cherry Barb | Tarpon |
|---|---|---|
| Wissenschaftlicher Name | Puntius titteya | Megalops atlanticus |
| Ordnung | Cypriniformes | Elopomorpha |
| Familie | Cyprinidae | Megalopidae |
| Conservation Status | Vulnerable | Vulnerable |
Physical Traits
| Eigenschaft | Cherry Barb | Tarpon |
|---|---|---|
| Maximale Länge | 5,0 cm | 250,0 cm |
| Maximales Gewicht | 0,002 kg | 161,0 kg |
| Färbung | Males are vivid cherry-red over the entire body with a dark mid-lateral stripe from snout to tail; females are pale golden-olive with the same dark stripe; fins reddish to clear. | Brilliant chrome-silver flanks with large, plate-like reflective scales producing a mirror-like sheen; back is dark blue-green; fins clear to dusky with elongated dorsal ray. |
Habitat & Environment
| Eigenschaft | Cherry Barb | Tarpon |
|---|---|---|
| Wassertyp | Freshwater | Freshwater & Saltwater |
| Tiefenbereich | — | 0-40m |
| Verbreitungsgebiet | Endemic to the Kelani River basin in southwestern Sri Lanka. Restricted to shaded, slow-flowing forest streams and small tributaries with dense riparian vegetation; population has … | Western and eastern Atlantic from Virginia south through the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and along the South American coast to Brazil; also West Africa. … |
| Lebensraum | Clear, fast-flowing streams of Sri Lanka and southwestern India. Shallow, oxygen-rich, cool mountain streams (22-26°C) over gravel substrates. Dense riparian vegetation provides cover. | Coral reefs, estuaries |
Aquarium Suitability
| Eigenschaft | Cherry Barb | Tarpon |
|---|---|---|
| Mindest-Aquariengröße | 60 L | — |
| Temperatur | 23-27 | — |
| pH-Bereich | 6.0-8.0 | — |
| Pflegeschwierigkeit | Easy | — |
| Temperament | Peaceful | — |
Angelinformationen
| Eigenschaft | Cherry Barb | Tarpon |
|---|---|---|
| Sportfisch | Nein | Ja |
| Kampfbewertung | — | 10/10 |
| Weltrekord | — | — |
| Quecksilbergehalt | — | — |
Cuisine & Edibility
Cherry Barb
Not consumed — ornamental aquarium fish listed as Vulnerable in the wild; kept for its cherry-red coloration and peaceful schooling nature.
Tarpon
Bony flesh with a strong, somewhat coarse texture; rarely eaten in modern sport fishing. Primarily catch-and-release; not commonly consumed due to bones and Vulnerable status.
Species Overview
Cherry Barb
The cherry barb is a small, colorful fish native to Sri Lanka's shaded forest streams. Males develop an intense cherry-red coloration during breeding. Listed as Vulnerable due to habitat loss and over-collection for the aquarium trade.
Tarpon
The tarpon is often called the 'Silver King' for its large mirror-like scales and acrobatic leaps. This ancient species has existed for over 100 million years and can breathe air using a modified swim bladder.
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