Barbodes semifasciolatus
Gold Barb

科学分类
快速统计
水族箱建造信息
关于此物种
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基本描述
详细描述
The Gold Barb, a xanthic variant of the wild Green Barb, is a perennial favorite in the aquarium hobby due to its hardiness and vibrant personality. Its adaptability to a wide range of water parameters makes it forgiving for beginners, yet its interesting behaviors provide engagement for seasoned hobbyists.
Socially, this species is a shoaling fish and its behavior is heavily influenced by group size. The minimum recommended school is a guideline; a larger group of eight or more is preferable. In a larger school, their energy and any fin-nipping tendencies are dispersed amongst the group, creating a more harmonious and natural dynamic. This behavior is not born of malice but is characteristic of active cyprinids establishing a social hierarchy. Consequently, tank mates must be chosen with care. Avoid slow swimmers with delicate fins. Ideal companions include other robust barbs (like Tiger or Rosy Barbs), danios, larger tetras, and bottom-dwellers such as Corydoras catfish and loaches that can easily evade the barbs' boisterous activity.
To create an ideal habitat, one should aim to replicate their native Asian environments of slow-moving streams. A tank layout with dense plantings of robust species like Vallisneria, Amazon Swords, and Java Fern along the back and sides will provide security and enrichment. However, leaving an open swimming area in the center is crucial to accommodate their active nature. Their tendency to nibble on flora stems from their omnivorous diet; providing vegetable-based foods or blanched vegetables like zucchini can help redirect this behavior from your aquascape. Gentle water circulation is preferred, as strong currents from powerheads can cause them undue stress.
Breeding Gold Barbs is a rewarding challenge, rated as moderately difficult. They are egg-scattering spawners with no parental instincts. A separate, dedicated breeding tank with soft, slightly acidic water is recommended. The tank should be furnished with fine-leaved plants like Java Moss or a spawning mop to catch the adhesive eggs. Conditioning the parent fish with a protein-rich diet of live and frozen foods for a few weeks is key to inducing spawning. Once the eggs are laid, the adults must be removed promptly to prevent them from consuming their own progeny. The fry are small and will require microscopic foods like infusoria or liquid fry food for the first few days before graduating to baby brine shrimp.
科学描述
The species Barbodes semifasciolatus is a cyprinid native to the Red River basin in southeastern Asia. The popular aquarium specimen, the Gold Barb, is a xanthic morph developed through selective captive breeding. The wild phenotype exhibits a greenish-brown body, explaining the alternative common name 'Green Barb'. The aposematic gold coloration of the 'Schuberti Barb' variant, a line famously developed by Thomas Schubert in the 1960s, is what is most commonly encountered in the ornamental fish trade.
Physiologically, this species demonstrates considerable plasticity, tolerating a broad spectrum of pH and water hardness levels, which underpins its 'easy' difficulty rating. Its moderate metabolism, oxygen consumption, and waste production rates result in a bioload factor of approximately 2.8. This quantitative value is useful for advanced aquarists when calculating stocking densities and required filtration capacity to maintain stable water chemistry and prevent the accumulation of nitrogenous wastes. Although primarily a freshwater species, its tolerance for salinity up to 0.5 ppt suggests a degree of euryhalinity, likely an adaptation to coastal river systems, though chronic exposure to saline conditions is not recommended.
Behaviorally, B. semifasciolatus is an active, shoaling species whose social dynamics are critical to its welfare. The fin-nipping behavior ('triggeredbylongfins') is often a manifestation of redirected aggression or stress, particularly when housed in insufficient numbers or without adequate environmental complexity. In sufficiently large conspecific groups, this energy is channeled into establishing a complex, non-aggressive social hierarchy. The species primarily occupies the middle and bottom water columns, consistent with its omnivorous foraging strategy, which includes feeding on detritus, small invertebrates, and plant matter. This herbivorous tendency ('planteater') is an important consideration for a planted vivarium. It is a non-guarding, egg-scattering spawner, a reproductive strategy common to many cyprinids that prioritizes fecundity over parental care. The IUCN has classified the wild population as 'Least Concern' (LC), and the prevalence of commercially aquacultured specimens effectively mitigates collection pressure on native stocks.