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Rasbora is a genus of fish in the family Danionidae. [1] They are native to freshwater habitats in South and Southeast Asia, as well as southeast China. [2] A single species, R. gerlachi, is only known from an old specimen that reputedly originated from Africa (), but this locality is considered doubtful. [3]
Danio margaritatus, the celestial pearl danio, often referred to in the aquarium trade as galaxy rasbora or Microrasbora sp. 'Galaxy', [2] is a small freshwater ray-finned fish belonging to the family Danionidae. This fish is from Myanmar and Northern Thailand [3] (in Salween basin).
Rasborinae, the rasboras, is a subfamily of freshwater ray-finned fishes belonging to the family Danionidae, the danionins or danios. The fishes in this subfamily are found in Asia. The fishes in this subfamily are found in Asia.
Species Common Name Image Trigonostigma espei (Meinken, 1967) Espei rasbora Trigonostigma hengeli (Meinken, 1956) Glowlight rasbora Trigonostigma heteromorpha (Duncker, 1904) Harlequin rasbora Trigonostigma somphongsi (Meinken, 1958) Somphong's rasbora Trigonostigma truncata (Tan, 2020) [2]
Rasbora calliura is a species of freshwater ray-finned fish belonging to the genus Rasbora within the subfamily Rasborinae of the family Danionidae. [2] This species is restricted to northwestern Borneo in Malaysia.
NO. 6: ‘LARGE’ CREATURE — WITH ‘LONG’ FINGERS AND RED EYES — DISCOVERED AS NEW SPECIES. Photos show the scaly animal found in a rocky forest of India. | Published June 17, 2024 | Read ...
The species became an instant favorite among aquarists after its introduction in the early 1900s and is the best known and most widely kept species among the rasboras. [3] In 1935, an image of a trio of harlequin rasboras, stamped in 14k gold, graced the cover of the first edition of William T. Innes 's classic Exotic Aquarium Fishes , and ...
Originally described as a rasbora, Rasbora axelrodi, this tiny species was later deemed to be more closely related to the danios but not enough to be moved into the genus Danio. Sundadanio axelrodi reaches a maximum size of 1.7 cm. Sundadanio was considered monotypic until the genus was reassessed by Conway, Kottelat and Tan in 2011. [3]