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Native fish are silver to brownish yellow with four vertical black stripes and red fins and snout. The green tiger barb is the same size and has the same nature as the normal barb, but has a green body. The green tiger barb, often called the moss green tiger barb, can vary considerably in how green it looks; to some people, it looks nearly black.
Puntigrus partipentazona, [2] the Dwarf Tiger Barb, is a species of cyprinid fish native to Southeast Asia where it is found in the Mekong, Mae Klong, and Chao Phraya basins of Thailand, the Malay Peninsula, and coastal streams of southeast Thailand and Cambodia where it occurs in streams and impoundments with dense weed growth.
Giant barbs (Catlocarpio siamensis) are the largest members of this family. Cyprinids are native to North America, Africa, and Eurasia. The largest known cyprinid is the giant barb (Catlocarpio siamensis), which may grow up to 3 m (9.8 ft) in length and 300 kg (660 lb) in weight. [4]
Their common names – barbs and barbels – refer to the fact that most members of the genera have a pair of barbels on their mouths, which they can use to search for food at the bottom of the water. Barbels are often fished for food; in some locations they are of commercial significance. The roe of barbels is poisonous, however.
This category contains articles about the taxa in the Barbus, Barbonymus and Puntius genera of freshwater fish known as Barbs. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
The six-banded tiger barb (Desmopuntius hexazona) is a Southeast Asian species of cyprinid fish native to blackwater streams, peat swamps and other freshwater habitats with little movement in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Borneo.
Unlike several other Toho monsters, Mothra is a largely heroic character, having been variously portrayed as a protector of her own island culture, [2] the Earth [3] and Japan. [4] Mothra's design is influenced by silkworms , their imagos, and those of giant silk moths in the family Saturniidae .
The most distinctive sign is the two barbs under the lower jaw. Found on sandy bottoms of lagoons and around reefs. Sometimes swims in large schools. Benthivorous 40 cm. Often confused with Yellowfin goatfish (Rouget queue jaune) Melon butterflyfish (Pavillon rond) Yellow to pale orange with lateral purplish blue stripes.