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The Rainbow Fish is a children's picture book drawn and written by Swiss author and illustrator, Marcus Pfister, and translated into English by J. Alison James.The book is best known for the distinctive shiny foil scales of the Rainbow Fish.
Rainbow Fish (also known simply as "Rainbow") (voiced by Rhys Huber) is a proud and feisty 9-year-old male fish with shiny scales, and the main character of the series. He lives with his parents, Sol and Aqua, and his 12-year-old sister, Ruby, in a cave near Shipwreck Park.
In a home setting, these fish need well-oxygenated water with a pH level of 6.8 – 7.2, optimal temperatures varying between 72 and 82 °F (22 and 28 °C), and plenty of aquatic plants to give them hiding places amid their school. If properly cared for, Rainbowfish can live up to 5 years in captivity. [5]
9 Story Media Group: British co-production Wilbur: 26 2006–2008 CBC Kids: Mercury Filmworks: Flash/Live-action Wild C.A.T.s: 13 1994-1995 CBS: Nelvana: American co-production Traditional Wild Kratts: 148 2011–present TVOKids: 9 Story Media Group: Flash The Wild Wild Circus Company: 5 2005 YTV: Nelvana: Shown on Funpak: CGI Will and Dewitt ...
A very large tuna eats all the red fish who are swimming around, leaving the little Swimmy all alone. Scared and on his own, the little black fish swims away into the large ocean. He sees many beautiful and strange creatures on his journey until he finally discovers another school of little red fish, just like his own family used to be.
Axelrod's rainbowfish (Chilatherina axelrodi) is a species of rainbowfish in the subfamily Melanotaeniinae.It is found in Papua New Guinea in the Yungkiri stream in the north western part of that nation.
LeVar Burton Reads has been well received by USA Today, The New Yorker, The Washington Post, The Verge, NPR, Los Angeles and many other publications. [9] [10]The show has won multiple industry awards, including the 2023 and 2024 Webby Award for Best Art and Culture Podcast, [11] [12] the 2023 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Podcast [13] and the 2020 Ignyte Award for Best Fiction Podcast. [14]
The story is told through the unreliable narration of a little fish, who has stolen a hat from a big fish and how the big fish reacts to the theft. It is a thematic follow-up to I Want My Hat Back (2011) and was meant to be a more literal sequel until Klassen took a suggestion to change which animals were in the story.