Omobranchus zebra
Zebra Blenny

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
The Zebra Blenny is a small, curious fish with an eel-like body and a big personality. Its charming black and white stripes, which give it its name, make it a standout in any aquarium. Unlike many popular aquarium fish, the Zebra Blenny is not a freshwater or a saltwater species; it requires brackish water, which is a mix of fresh and saltwater. This makes it a fantastic choice for someone looking to start their first brackish tank.
In the aquarium, this blenny spends most of its time near the bottom, weaving through rocks and peeking out from its favorite cave. It has a moderately active nature and is fun to watch as it explores its surroundings. While generally peaceful, it can be territorial and protective of its chosen home, so it's often best kept by itself or with other peaceful fish that swim in the middle or top of the tank. They are very easy to feed and will happily accept a variety of common fish foods, from flakes to small frozen shrimps.
A crucial thing to know is that these blennies are incredible escape artists! Their slender bodies and adventurous nature mean they can squeeze through the smallest gaps, so a tight-fitting lid on the aquarium is absolutely necessary to keep them safe. Due to its specific water needs, it's rated as a medium-difficulty fish, but its daily care is straightforward once the tank is set up correctly.
详细描述
The Zebra Blenny, Omobranchus zebra, is a fascinating benthic fish from the Indo-West Pacific, where it inhabits low-energy brackish environments such as mangrove swamps, estuaries, and tidal mudflats. Its distinctive anguilliform, or eel-like, body shape is an adaptation for navigating the complex structures of mangrove roots and tight rock crevices. Understanding its natural habitat is key to successfully keeping it in an aquarium.
A long-style aquarium is preferable to a tall one to maximize the bottom-dwelling space this territorial fish requires. The aquascape should be rich with structure, incorporating plenty of small caves, PVC tubes, and rockwork to provide hiding places. This not only makes the blenny feel secure but also helps to break lines of sight, which is essential for managing aggression if you attempt to keep a pair or a small group. A fine sand or smooth gravel substrate is ideal for protecting its scaleless body as it slithers across the bottom.
Water parameters are the most critical aspect of its care. As a euryhaline species, it is adaptable to a wide range of salinities, but stability is paramount. A specific gravity between 1.005 and 1.012, maintained with a refractometer, is a good target. The required alkaline conditions are often naturally maintained by using marine salt mix and an aragonite-based sand or crushed coral in the filter. Water movement should be gentle to replicate its native calm waters; an air-driven sponge filter is an excellent choice as it provides both filtration and aeration without creating excessive current.
Its omnivorous diet in the wild consists of grazing on biofilm, microalgae, and tiny crustaceans. In captivity, this should be replicated with a varied diet. A high-quality sinking pellet can serve as a staple, supplemented several times a week with frozen foods like mysis shrimp, daphnia, and brine shrimp. Including spirulina-based foods will satisfy its herbivorous needs. Its natural grazing behavior makes it a functional addition to the tank's cleanup crew, as it will actively consume biofilm from surfaces.
Regarding tank mates, caution is advised. The Zebra Blenny is best kept singly to avoid territorial disputes. If a community is desired, select peaceful, mid-to-top-dwelling brackish species such as Celebes Rainbowfish or certain species of gobies that do not compete for the same caves. Avoid keeping it with other blennies or similarly shaped fish. Its reputation as an escape artist is well-earned; it will exploit any gap in the lid, a behavior derived from its natural ability to move between tide pools during low tide.
科学描述
Taxonomically positioned within the family Blenniidae, Omobranchus zebra is a combtooth blenny characterized by its lack of cranial cirri and its distinctively anguilliform morphology. This elongated, laterally compressed body plan is a functional adaptation for its benthic, cryptic lifestyle in complex estuarine habitats across the Indo-West Pacific. The vertical bars ('zebra' pattern) provide effective camouflage amidst the shadowy interplay of light in mangrove prop roots and rocky intertidal zones.
Physiologically, O. zebra is a remarkable example of a euryhaline teleost. Its ability to thrive in a broad salinity spectrum (5-20 ppt) is facilitated by sophisticated osmoregulatory mechanisms involving ion-transporting cells (ionocytes) in the gill epithelia and renal adjustments to maintain internal homeostasis against fluctuating external osmotic pressures. Its low oxygen consumption is consistent with its moderate metabolic rate and sedentary, benthic existence. An important husbandry consideration is its natural amphibious tendency. Like many intertidal blennies, it can survive short periods of emersion by utilizing cutaneous respiration and a protective mucus layer to prevent desiccation, a behavior that manifests as 'jumping' or escaping in an aquarium setting. Therefore, a secure, sealed aquarium lid is a mandatory husbandry provision.
From an ethological perspective, O. zebra displays strong site-attachment and resource-defense territoriality. The defended resource is typically a small cavity or burrow that serves as a refuge from predation and a potential nesting site. This behavior is primarily intraspecific but can extend to heterospecifics of similar morphology or niche. The 'optional' social profile indicates that while solitary housing is simplest, conspecific pairs or groups may be maintained in sufficiently large and structurally complex systems where multiple territories can be established.
Reproduction in captivity is challenging, categorizing its breeding as 'difficult.' O. zebra is a demersal spawner exhibiting paternal care. The male guards and aerates the egg mass, which is deposited by the female on the ceiling of a cave or shell. The principal bottleneck to successful captive breeding is the larval rearing phase. Upon hatching, the larvae are pelagic, microscopic, and require a diet of suitable zooplankton, such as cultured rotifers (Brachionus plicatilis) followed by Artemia nauplii, in a dedicated green-water rearing system until they undergo metamorphosis and settle into a benthic habit. Its IUCN status of 'Least Concern' is supported by its wide geographic distribution and ecological plasticity, allowing it to colonize both natural and anthropogenically modified habitats like harbors and jetties.