Guidelines for green certification of ornamental fishes


A national-level task force constituted under the aegis of the Marine Products Export Development Authority (MPEDA) has finalised and submitted the guidelines for green certification of ornamental fishes to Leena Nair, Chairman, MPEDA, at a function organised at the MPEDA head office here on Tuesday.

The seven-member task force, chaired by E.G. Silas, former Vice-Chancellor, Kerala Agricultural University, was formed after an international workshop on green certification of ornamental fishes organised here from October 14 to 18, 2008, by the MPEDA, in association with the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) and Project Piaba Brazil.

Kuruvilla Thomas, Director (Marketing), MPEDA, welcomed the gathering and gave the introductory remarks at the function.

Ms. Nair suggested that the document, the first of its kind in the sector, be sent to international organisations such as the FAO for constructive suggestions and later it could be released to the stakeholders.

Green certification, or eco-labelling, is the certification given to a product to ensure its environmental and socioeconomic sustainability.



It ensures product quality, safety and traceability, which, in turn, enhance the consumer acceptance of the product.

The workshop, considered a milestone, stressed the need for developing a value-chain approach from collection and culture to the export of ornamental freshwater fishes.

The issue of Geographical Indication of species is addressed in the guidelines. In the case of ornamental fish, Geographical Indication becomes imperative as it will indicate the natural distribution of a species and the location and country it belongs to.

This will give legal protection to the species and help in the event of any IPR/patent issues.
Task force

The seven-member task force has gone into all details regarding collection of ornamental fish from the wild, their handling, holding facilities, culture of ornamental fish species, their handling and the facilities needed for the export of these and also have looked into the Geographical Indication of each species and the requirements needed for the import of exotic species.

The task force document gives in detail all requirements and criteria necessary for each link in the value-chain system, the adoption of which enables traceability and gives information about the way the fish is handled at various stages. The members of the task force were A. Gopalakrishnan, NBFGR, Kochi; A. Ramachandran, Cochin University of Science and Technology; T.V. Anna Mercy, College of Fisheries, Panangad; Pushpangadan K.R., ornamental fish exporter, Kochi; Kripan Sarkar, ornamental fish breeder, West Bengal; Anikuttan K.K, Assistant Director (OFD), MPEDA; and Anilkumar P., former Assistant Director (OFD), MPEDA.

New Polychaete Derived AquaThrive Food is Fish Approved

AquaThrive is a new dry aquarium feed unlike any other. Using a patented process, the pellets are made from fresh cultured (Terebellid) Polychaete worms. This is a sustainable alternative to fish meal which dominates the fish food industry. It also may prove more valuable to specialized Polychaete feeders such as some Butterflyfish species… hence I.



AquaThrive is a new dry aquarium feed unlike any other. Using a patented process, the pellets are made from fresh cultured (Terebellid) Polychaete worms. This is a sustainable alternative to fish meal which dominates the fish food industry. It also may prove more valuable to specialized Polychaete feeders such as some Butterflyfish species… hence I had to try them out.

Ingredients:


* Fishmeal
* Polychaetes
* Cereal
* Squid
* Seaweed
* Brewers Yeast
* Mussel
* Fish Oil
* Lecithin
* Spirulina

Besides the inclusion of farmed Polychaetes, what really separates this pellet food is the fat content. It is a staggering 11%! This is more then double the amount found in Hikari Marine-A (5%). This can be a good thing, particularly for juvenile marine fish with fast metabolisms, but must be used wisely. AquaThrive’s protein numbers hit 45% which put them in range with the leaders, while its listed ash and phosphorus properities are a percentage point or two lower than other popular brands.



The overall scent is not as strong as its competitors such as Hikari and Spectrum. However, it is interesting that the AquaThrive food illicits a much stronger coral response than other dry pellets. Even Azooxanthellate corals quickly open when this hits the water.

To test this new food I used it to condition this juvenile Prognathodes marcellae. (Reason being, my other acclimated fish will eat anything and everything!) Three weeks on a diet of Aquathrive and mysis and this fish gained significant bodymass–enough that this 2″ specimen could easily hold its own with larger 5″ Chaetodonts. While not a controlled application, I do believe the fish gained this mass quicker. I currently use Aquathrive weekly to vary the diet of the fishes, but feed it heavier when receiving fish to increase energy stores quickly. In my experience thus far, all fish have readilly accepted AquaThrive, but the 1mm oblong size can be difficult for larger fish. AquaThrive does offer a 1.5mm pellet, but I would not mind seeing larger 2mm and 3mm sizes come to fruition.



For our beloved finned friends, variety is indeed the spice of life. Overall, AquaThrive appears to be a clean, palatable food for ornamental marine fish that adds another food option for aquarists.

Environment group puts Miss Kerala Fish in red list



Thiruvananthapuram, Monday, February 01, 2010: ‘Puntius Denisonii’, an ornamental fish known across the globe as ‘Miss Kerala’, and one which has been facing the danger of extinction, has been put on the red list of International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) an environment protection group.



A freshwater fish that was once endemic and largely exclusive to the running waters of the Achenkovil and Chaliyar rivers, Miss Kerala, also known as the Red Line Torpedo Barb, was a major export revenue earner for the State in the ornamental fish export sector, with each of these beauties raking in at least Rs.1,500. However, with no apparent steps from authorities concerned to curb the exports, the Barb was slowly swimming towards becoming history.



According to the group, s the Puntius Denisonii is “vulnerable” because it has a restricted Extent of Occurrence (less than 20,000 km²), and is suffering from a decline in habitat quality and number of mature individuals.

‘Miss Kerala’, according to the list, is found in only four locations - the Cheenkannipuzha (tributary of the Valapattanam River), Achenkovil, Chaliyar, and near Mundakayam. The Red List also states that the fish is likely to be threatened by habitat degradation.

Together with ‘Miss Kerala’, 52 other species of freshwater fishes from India have been placed under various threat categories in the IUCN Red List.

Aquatic Plants



Thousands of plant species live in freshwater habitats around the world: along edges, on the surface, or at the bottom of shallow lakes and ponds; in temporarily flooded low areas and meadows; at seeps and springs (cienegas) in hill or montane regions; in flowing water of streams and rivers; rooted in waterlogged soils; and along any other natural or human-produced drainage system. "Freshwater wetlands" occur from below sealevel to some very lofty alpine habitats, where water may persist throughout the year or where it can be very ephemeral. Normally we classify a freshwater wetland as a place where at least half of the species found there are truly aquatic plant species.



Many species of aquatic plants are essentially cosmopolitan, meaning that they are widely distributed around the world. Some of the widest distributions are attributable to human activities. Humans have accidentally (sometimes intentionally) transported seeds, fruits, or vegetative clones from one pond or watershed to another, but many of the cosmopolitan distributions are attributable instead to birds, particularly waterfowl, which inadvertently transport the plant propagules when lodged in their features or trapped in mud on the feet.
Characteristics of a Freshwater Environment

1. Water is plentiful, at least during the growing season.
2. PFD (wavelengths of sunlight used for photosynthesis) is low for submerged leaves, because light penetration through the water column is very much reduced. At the water surface there often is unobstructed full sun for a photosynthetic organ floating, and an emergent canopy may intercept high PFD.
3. Concentration of carbon dioxide dissolved in water is low (higher in water strongly acidic or strongly basic than in neutral pH solutions).
4. Oxygen concentration of oxygen in the water and in thick tissues of the underwater plant is low.
5. Minerals and nutrients are scarce or dilute within the water medium, as compared with drier soil.
6. Moving water (currents and waves) can be damaging to the organs of the plant.



Types of Leaves

Many of the designs exhibited by plants living in water were obvious to early botanists. For example, Agnus Arber published a book in 1920 on aquatic plants, documenting many of the strategies that we still talk about today.

All accounts discuss three basic types of leaves:

1. submersed leaves, which are very thin and narrow, often highly dissected and very flexible
2. floating leaves, broader leaves that are firm or leathery but flexible enough to resist tearing by wave action
3. emersed leaves (aerial leaves), i.e., similar to typical leaves of terrestrial plants living nearby

Submersed leaves receive low levels of sunlight (PFD) because light energy diminishes rapidly while passing through a water column. Light penetration is especially poor in turbid water with dense surface populations of algae. Such underwater leaves are often so highly dissected that the segments may appear superficially to be macroscopic green algae (e.g., Chara and Nitella). This is a strategy to maximize surface-to-volume (S/V), permitting rapid diffusion of carbon dioxide into the chloroplasts of the cells by having proportionately greater surface area. Certain aquatic species have very high ratios of surface to volume (S/V) by having one- or two-cell layer construction. These leaves have a very thin cuticle (wax), but the wax is porous enough to permit easy diffusion of gases through the surface. On these leaves, stomates are generally absent, and would be useless for submerged plants, where water, not air, continually surrounds the photosynthetic organ. Such leaves have very poor development of xylem tissue (water transport), appropriate inasmuch as shoots are bathed in water. Intercellular air spaces are not well developed, thereby enabling this plant to remain submersed by having greater specific gravity. The highly dissected underwater shoot can be tugged at and pulled by water currents without damaging the segments (i.e., little mechanical resistance to current). In swiftly running streams, these shoots and leaves wave and dance wildly.

* Examples of highly dissected submersed leaves
o Parrot's feather (Myriophyllum aquaticum) and European milfoil (M. spicatum)
o pondweed (Potamogeton pectinatus, P. filiformis, P. crispus, P. foliosus)
o thread-leaved water-nymph (Najas gracillima) and rice-field water-nymph (N. graminea)
o hornwort (Ceratophyllum demersum, C. submersum)
* Examples of slightly wider but very thin submersed leaves
o elodea (Elodea canadensis, E. nuttallii, Egeria densa)
o mare's-tail (Hippuris vulgaris)
* Examples of thread-like, undivided leaves:
o horned-pondweed (Zannichellia palustris)
o ditch-grass (Ruppia cirrhosa, R. maritima)
o quillwort (Isoetes spp.)
o Pilularia americana

Floating leaves tend to be much broader, without major lobing, and remain flat on the water, taking advantage of full sun. Stomates are present for gas exchange, especially on the upper (adaxial) leaf surface. The upper leaf surface tends to have a very prominent cuticle, thereby permitting water to roll off, and not interfering with photosynthesis or promoting growth of epiphytic algae. Epidermis may be rich in chloroplasts, and a bifacial mesophyll (palisade and spongy layers) is formed. Floating leaves often have well-developed air chambers (lacunae), which provide buoyancy, and they may also have hard cells, sclereids, within the mesophyll that provide some toughness for the leaf and prevent the layers from becoming collapsed.

* Examples:
o water lily (Nymphaea odorata)
o yellow pond-lily (certain species of Nuphar)
o cape-pondweed (Aponogeton distachyon)
o pondweed (e.g., Potamogeton nodosus, P. natans)
o Victorian water lily (Victoria regia, V. cruziana)
o water-shield (Brasenia schreberi)
o floating heart (Nymphoides)
o water-chestnut (Trapa natans
o frog-bit (Hydrocharis morsus-ranae)

Emersed (aerial) leaves are essentially like typical leaves of herbaceous angiosperms that inhabit full-sun environments. Such leaves are emergent from the water and, consequently, have a waxy cuticle on both surfaces. Many are also amphistomatic (stomates on both surfaces and in nearly equal densities) and have well-developed leaf mesophyll, to take advantage of the abundant light.

* Herbaceous perennial examples:
o cattails (Typha)
o wetland irises (Iris)
o buttercups (e.g., species of Ranunculus and Caltha palustris)
o hundreds of grass species (Poaceae), including the giant reed, Phragmites australis
o sacred lotus, Nelumbo nucifera, N. lutea, and in some species of yellow pond-lily (e.g., Nuphar polysepala)
o skunk-cabbage, Symplocarpus foetidus, as well as aquatic aroids from the tropics
o arrowleaf (Sagittaria spp.) and water-plantains (Alisma)
o some species of knotweed (Persicaria or Polygonum)
o lizard's tail (Saururus cernuum) and yerba mansa (Anemopsis californica)
o bur-reed (Sparganium)
o Thalia geniculata (Family Marantaceae) and pickerelweed (Pontederia cordata, Family Pontederiaceae)
* umbellifers, e.g., cutleaf water-parsnip (Berula erecta) and species of Hydrocotyle

Lifeforms of Aquatic Plants


Among the many species that are required to inhabit fresh water, there are a number of plant designs or lifeforms:

* Plant rooted in the mud or muck
o with emersed leaves (see Types of Leaves)
o with photosynthetic stems and relatively small leaves
+ species of tule (Scirpus) and other species of sedges (e.g., Carex, Eleocharis, and Cyperus) with or without noticeable leaves, e.g., papyrus (Cyperus papyrus, Family Cyperaceae)
+ most species of rushes (Juncus, Family Juncaceae)
+ horsetails (Equisetum, seedless land plants)
o with plant body modified as submersed thallus, which is attached to a rock substrate (Family Podostemonaceae); species in this family have photosynthetic roots
o with floating leaves only (see Types of Leaves)
o with submersed leaves only (most examples in Types of Leaves)

Floating plant with no attachment to the mud or bottom and with inflated portions of leaves or stems or special hairs that enable the plant to remain floating

Examples:
+ water-lettuce (Pistia stratiotes) with nonwettable leaves
+ water-hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) with inflated petioles
+ duckweeds (Subfamily Lemnoideae of Family Araceae, Lemna, Spirodela, Wolffia, Wolffiella), among the tiniest vascular plants
+ bladderworts (Utricularia) with a modified, submersed stem system for photosynthesis and catching invertebrate prey and, sometimes, a rosette of inflated stems floating at the surface of the water (U. inflata)
+ featherfoil (Hottonia inflata) with dissected submersed leaves and at the surface inflated, leafless stems
+ water soldier (Stratiotes aloides)
+ Phyllanthus fluvitans
+ Salvinia with nonwettable leaves by possessing special hairs
+ mosquito fern (Azolla filiculoides, A. mexicana)

Free-floating, submersed plant (in most cases, due to fragmentation of rooted plants)

Plant rooted in the bottom mud and muck but with two distinct types of leaves, i.e., submersed and emersed leaves or submersed and floating leaves (amphibious plant)

Examples of amphibious plants with dissected submersed leaves and unmodified emersed leaves:
+ Rorippa amphibia
+ Myriophyllum heterophyllum
+ Prosperinaca palustris
+ water-marigold, Megalodonta beckii

Examples of amphibious plants with dissected submersed leaves and broader floating leaves
+ Potamogeton natans, P. amphibium, P. vaseyi, P. spirillus
+ Cabomba caroliniana and water-shield (Brasenia schreberi, Family Cabombaceae)

Plants rooted in soil or mud (also sand) along edge or bank of freshwater. This is essentially terrestrial (e.g., along a stream bank or lake shore, in freshwater marsh or a very wet mountain meadow) or with stiff shoots that arise from the water, i.e., where a plant shoot does not require support by the water. A number of shoreline herbs have a land form and water form, where the individuals formed in standing water have more highly dissected leaves than the land form (e.g., Marsilea and Ranunculus sceleratus, R. aquatilis).

An aquatic plant may experience abundant soil moisture during the entire growing season, but water levels drop during the dry season or summer months, when these types of plants commonly experience severe water stress and dormancy if water recedes or soil around the root system becomes very dry.



One or a few species of emergent aquatic plants can dominate the freshwater community. Most of these grow aggressively via rhizomes or stolons, crowding out other species. Rhizomes permit these plants to endure periods of environmental stress, and the rhizome (or corm) is the overwintering bud of plants growing in cold climates.

A number of floating aquatic species are excellent organisms in which to study logarithmic population growth. Under full sun and nonlimiting nutrients, a single individual can be introduced into a pond and multiply rapidly via vegetative means. For example, duckweeds (Subfamily Lemnoideae of Family Araceae) clone by forming plantlets on the mother plant, doubling in surface coverage approximately every two days. Water-lettuce, Pistia stratiotes, forms new plants around the mother plant via underwater stolons. Water-hyacinth, Eichhornia crassipes, and floating fern species of Salvinia and Azolla also show explosive population growth. In the tropics and heated quiet waters of ponds and lakes, such species can completely cover the water surface within several months, and for that reason are considered pernicious aquatic weeds, which are removed at great expense and trouble because they clog channels and choke out other forms of life in the body of water.

Plants that normally are submersed typically form their flowers raised above the water surface. This is true, e.g., of Myriophyllum, Elodea, Hippuris, and Utricularia. There are some bizarre plants that have underwater pollination mechanisms, most notably Vallisneria.

An important adaptation for many freshwater aquatic plants is the formation of aerenchyma, which is parenchyma tissue having large intercellular air spaces. Aerenchyma functions both to store oxygen and to transport that gas to living tissues. This gas collection is important in leaves for buoyancy. In addition, the system of lacunae is a diffusion pathway for oxygen; the oxygen is, of course, made in the chloroplasts during the light reaction of photosynthesis. Oxygen, when released via photosynthesis, diffuses preferentially into the lacunae, because it cannot diffuse as rapidly into water and comes out of solution in the intercellular air spaces, where oxygen concentration of trapped air there may be one-third or greater. Here it can be used in constructive ways by aquatic plants. A leaf midvein, petiole, or stem develops an internal pressure, which enables oxygen to be transported via bulk flow in a lacunar network to rhizomes and roots located in the anaerobic mud and muck, permitting these organs to grow more rapidly. Gases can also move in bulk to young tissues, where the pressurized air helps expansion of developing lacunae near the growing tip. The cut end of an aquatic plant will give out bubbles (underwater, of course) from lacunar gas under pressure.

Woody species that also may line palustrine and riverine habitats generally do not show the same adaptations of leaves found in the herbaceous species that actually live in the water. The most interesting case of convergence is the willow-type leaf. Willow, Salix (Family Salicaceae), has relatively long lanceolate to narrowly ovate leaves with tapered tips, and the branches tend to be very flexible, so that in running water the leaves can be dragged through the water with relatively little resistance and no tearing. Many totally unrelated woody shoreline plants from around the world have evolved this type of leaf, e.g., in seep-willow (Baccharis salicifolia) and arrow weed (Pluchea sericea, both Family Asteraceae) of California and Australian willow (Geijera parviflora, Family Rutaceae) and Australian willow myrtle (Agonis flexuosa, Family Myrtaceae) of Australia.

Freshwater Larviculture



They account for more than 50 of the zooplankton production in some freshwater systems and as such are a vital link in the food chain for most aquatic life. Live food source in freshwater larviculture and in the ornamental. For different carp species and in the ornamental fish industry i. Other uses live food source in freshwater larviculture and in the ornamental fish industry. A genus of cladoceran, is also used in the giant freshwater prawn larval rearing as practised in thailand. Freshwater rotifer, brachionus calyciflorus, and its application in fish larviculture. Ceriodaphnia dubia and daphnia magna daphnids water flea neonates and starter cultures. Of algae in larviculture of macrobrachium rosenbergii, aquaculture. Daphnia is a frequently used food source in the freshwater larviculture i. They account for more than 50 of the zooplankton production in some freshwater systems and as such are a vital link in the food chain for most aquatic life. Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item hdl. In chronic tests, survival and reproduction are recorded. Marine rotifers are generally considered more prolific and robust than freshwater species, and are therefore the preferred choice.



A genus of cladoceran, is also used in the giant freshwater prawn larval rearing as practised in thailand. Ceriodaphnia dubia and daphnia magna daphnids water flea neonates and starter cultures. For different carp species and in the ornamental fish industry i. Srac fact sheets are reviewed annually by the publications, videos, and computer. Freshwater fish farming in virginia selecting the right fish to raise. Live food source in freshwater larviculture and in the ornamental. Other uses live food source in freshwater larviculture and in the ornamental fish industry. In chronic tests, survival and reproduction are recorded. Srac 0700 zooplankton succession and larval fish culture in freshwater ponds. Artemia culture for intensive finfish and crustacean larviculture. During larviculture, the rotifer is the most commonly used live feed. Daphnia is a frequently used food source in the freshwater larviculture i. Ceriodaphnia dubia and daphnia magna daphnids water flea neonates and starter cultures. Of algae in larviculture of macrobrachium rosenbergii, aquaculture. Freshwater species live feeds are an essential component during the larviculture stage. Other uses live food source in freshwater larviculture and in the ornamental fish industry. Effects of feeding w 3 hufa enriched artemia during a progressively increasing period on the larviculture of freshwater prawns aquaculture international, 3 236 242.

Live food source in freshwater larviculture and in the ornamental. Ceriodaphnia dubia and daphnia magna daphnids water flea neonates and starter cultures. Daphnia is a frequently used food source in the freshwater larviculture i. For different carp species and in the ornamental fish industry i. The salmonids, perhaps the group cultured most widely on an. Daphnia is a frequently used food source in the freshwater larviculture i. Marine rotifers are generally considered more prolific and robust than freshwater species, and are therefore the preferred choice. Freshwater fish larviculture is often carried out in ponds with natural zooplankton as the larval food. Marine rotifers are generally considered more prolific and robust than freshwater species, and are therefore the preferred choice. Freshwater rotifer, brachionus calyciflorus, and its application in fish larviculture. Corruscans larvae showed total mortality in freshwater and better growth and survival in slightly salt. Growth and or survival while compared to freshwater larviculture. For different carp species and in the ornamental fish industry i. For different carp species and in the ornamental fish industry i. Daphnia is a frequently used food source in the freshwater larviculture i.

Arimoro. For different carp species and in the ornamental fish. Daphnia is a frequently used food source in the freshwater larviculture i. Marine rotifers are generally considered more prolific and robust than freshwater species, and are therefore the preferred choice. Use of the rotifer, brachionus calyciflorus pallas, in freshwater ornamental fish larviculture l. Freshwater chlorella, scenesdesmus are important useful algae for the culture of. Culture of the freshwater rotifer, brachionus calyciflorus, and its application in fish larviculture technology. Pallas, in freshwater ornamental fish larviculture hydrobiologia 358. Marine rotifers are generally considered more prolific and robust than freshwater species, and are therefore the preferred choice. Freshwater rotifer, brachionus calyciflorus, and its application in fish larviculture. Biology and life cycle of daphnia.

Pallas, in freshwater ornamental fish larviculture hydrobiologia 358. Artemia culture for intensive finfish and crustacean larviculture. Growth and or survival while compared to freshwater larviculture. Freshwater species live feeds are an essential component during the larviculture stage. Corruscans larvae showed total mortality in freshwater and better growth and survival in slightly salt. Freshwater rotifer, brachionus calyciflorus, and its application in fish larviculture. Effects of feeding w 3 hufa enriched artemia during a progressively increasing period on the larviculture of freshwater prawns aquaculture international, 3 236 242. Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item hdl. Freshwater chlorella, scenesdesmus are important useful algae for the culture of.

Tetra Fish Food



Tetra is popular freshwater fish tank. The fish are brightly colored fish that live in tropical regions. The freshwater fish from the family Characidae. However, a variety of tetra families is available. Tetra includes the Anostomidae. The fish was caught in the lands of South and Central America and is sometimes called Headstanders. If you are looking fish Fish Tank This is not ideal for communal tanks full. If you already have the fish, which lives in a third tank better community.



Anostomus-Anostomus

Thesis loggers known as the Anostomus rays, which come from South America and grow 6 inches in size. The breed has long pointed snouts and as a cylinder-shaped body. The fish has straight lines and circular ends, which are equivalent in size. The body transversely connects with stripes gold and black, the red dots that extend from top to bottom the roots of caudal fins of fish. Colors range lobes leaving neutral fish. Like the Anostomidae breeds, this fish also swims with his head hanging down. However, when the fish darts forward, lift your head immediately. The Anostomus-Anostomus are ideal for residents with larger fish. Anostomus-Anostomus tend to enjoy the lettuce, frozen foods, etc. The fish does not require conditions Specific water. However, the water temperature should be 78 degrees Fahrenheit. This fish requires further study, since the experts it is unclear how the races Fish or sexes.



Punctatus Chilodus Headstand commonly known as Pearl, and the stained Headstand originates from northern South America. The fish grows around 3 ½ inches in size. Chilodus punctatus has a body that extends to the gray and green colors over his body and starts the colors with rows of spots brown. At an angle of 45 degrees horizontal, this fish tends to tilt the head down. Chilodus punctatus is a peaceful creature, which is conveniently stored in tanks community. Chilodus punctatus Feeding habits include all food, however, you must mix the meals with spinach, lettuce or other green foods. Punctatus Chilodus prefer reasonably soft water conditions and lightly acidic water. The water temperature should be around 80 degrees Fahrenheit. The species Women tend to weigh more than the male counterpart does not. Fish breeding similar to the Characins, yet the eggs are brown. The fish are placed around 200 eggs, the fry or offspring are difficult to cultivate.




Lebiasinidae


Lebiasinidae are similar to the Characins family. However, the fish has a line of lower jaw, which does not include teeth. Fish of South America has one of the most beautiful that relatives of habitat in the water tank. The fish has an extended body. Furthermore, the Lebiasinidae is commonly known as the Pencilfishes, who methodically the fish has a classification of relatives as one of the messiest fish in the tank water. This particular species is named in the sample of Gender, the fish is said to change color patterns frequently.



Nannostomus Beckfordi species are commonly known as the golden pen or pencil Beckford. The fish come from British Guiana and the Amazon Basin. Beckfordi Nannostomus grows 1 ¾ in size and has an extended body, which golden-brown tones to navigate through a lid on black background with gold stripes or color patterns nervous red. The fish changes color during night hours. This species is ideal for peaceful community tanks, which its hardy nature prefers reasonably soft waters, and tolerated the water pretty hard. Neutral to acidic water are also acceptable insignificant. The water temperature should be maintained at 80 degrees Fahrenheit.

Glass Coffee Table – you can get a costume with an aquarium



very popular hobby today is the ownership and maintenance of an aquarium. Most people love the look of an aquarium at home. However, not many are aware that the responsibility because they believe that the maintenance of the aquarium requires a lot of work and money. While the basis for the aquarium may be expensive, there are many ways that costs are minimized, and it does not matter much. The benefits you got from your aquarium far outweigh the work you might need.

Aquariumsenjoyed by people of all ages and is entertaining as they are instructive. Unlike many hobbies that require constant activity observed colorful and exotic fish in water break something that most find it very relaxing and enjoyable. This is why many choose a custom aquarium glass coffee table for her living room. Although the management of an aquarium may require a certain knowledge, not much is known about the various types of fish and their needs and learn theseThe plant will add color and beauty to your home. The living room is the room most often chosen for the aquarium glass coffee table and is the perfect choice for family and guests to spend more time than other rooms.



When you buy your glass table with an aquarium that is a complete unit, and installation is very simple. Follow the instructions that came with it, fill it with water and is all ready to go. The table isglass beveled edge, which makes them perfect in every room. Many companies have discussed this choice in their home for their guests and customers.



Keeping ornamental fish today requires knowledge from the years ago. The company that your glass coffee table with an aquarium, you will be informed about everything you need to know who leads the right care for your fish. This new style of furniture is inspired and the perfect focal point in your living room.That can be mounted in a corner or center of the room. The ease of maintenance of your coffee table glass allows, turtles, frogs and freshwater fish are many. Can the choice of decorative foliage and plants you choose, now is great as well.



Ornamental fish are the third most popular seafood in the United States, so this is an excellent choice for families with children. In view of recent developments, it is never the maintenance of an aquarium in excellent condition was . Facilitate the family, as well as your guests can enjoy the pleasant sensation to come out of the water with a feeling of peace and tranquility. The aquarium glass coffee table is not just a piece of furniture, but also the ' Article more beautiful space.



These beauties are accepted in a number of different shapes, square, rectangle, hexagon and round. The pumps and filters needed is integrated into the system for you. A glass> Aquarium Coffee Table is economically and took a long time. Consider this as your next piece of living room furniture.

Malaysia, Indonesia To Expand Cooperation In Fisheries Industries



By Ahmad Fuad Yahya

JAKARTA, Jan 15 (Bernama) -- Malaysia and Indonesia are to widen cooperation in the marine and fisheries industries, particularly in the high-impact seaweed production and ornamental fish sectors, Malaysian Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Minister Datuk Seri Noh Omar said here Friday.

"We see great potential for cooperation in research and processing in these two sectors," he said.

Both countries would also cooperate in the field of bio-security to ensure that the fish landed could be exported to and accepted in the European markets, he told reporters after discussions with Indonesian Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Fadel Muhammad.



Noh said both countries also agreed to ensure the welfare of their fishermen caught for poaching in each other's territorial waters.

Meanwhile, Fadel said it was strategic for Malaysia and Indonesia to step up cooperation in fisheries because both countries, as members of the D-8 group of Islamic developing countries, had agreed on marine and fisheries industries as the basis for enhancing food security.

"Stepped up cooperation in fisheries is also in line with the Asean-China Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and the Asean-Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership (AJCEP) Agreement," he said.

He said the volume of Indonesian exports to Malaysia in the fisheries sector in 2008 was 57,159 tonnes valued at US$62.7 million (RM209.7 million).

Noh is leading a delegation of senior government officers and heads of government-linked companies (GLCs) on a week-long visit to Indonesia as a follow-up to the visit of Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak to Sulawesi at the end of last year to discuss potential cooperation and investment in agriculture.

-- BERNAMA

Keeping crab



Aquarium crabs can be kept for various reasons. Many species are great scavengers and can help you to keep up the water quality, since they will consume dead and dying organic matter, e.g. left over fish food and decaying plants. Others are kept chiefly for their good looks and fascination behaviors, such as the Red-clawed crab and the Fiddler crab.

The term aquarium crabs is often used to describe a wide range of different aquatic creatures, but it is actually only the members of the infraorder Brachyura in the order Decapoda that is considered true crabs by biologists. The true crabs have five pairs of walking legs, but the first pair has developed into a pair of claws. Most true crab species have flattened shells, and the abdomen is usually folded under the cephalothorax (the first major body section).

As mentioned above, a lot of species that do not belong to the infraorder Brachyura is still sold as aquarium crabs, since they resemble crabs by being short crustaceans with thick exoskeletons and ten legs. In this group of “un-true” aquatic crabs you will for instance find King crabs, Porcelain crabs and Hermit crabs. King crabs, Porcelain crabs and Hermit crabs are all examples of specimens found in the infraorder Anomura. Just like the infraorder Brachyura, the infraorder Anomurabelongs to the order Decapoda. Unlike the true crabs found in Decapoda, the Anomura species do however have their last pair of legs hidden inside the gill chamber, where they are used to clean the gills.

Another species that is often counted among the aquarium crabs is the Horseshoe crab, even though it is actually more closely related to spiders than crabs. It belongs to the family Limulidae and the genus Limulus. Provide your Horseshoe crab with a water temperature between 72 and 78° F, a pH between 8.1-8.4 and a dKH between 8 and 12. It is a peaceful saltwater crab and is therefore popular in reef aquariums.

As mentioned earlier, one of the most popular aquarium crabs among the species kept for their beauty is the Red-clawed crab. If you want to keep this crab, you must provide it with surface access. It will prefer a half-filled aquarium with brackish water and can be kept with other brackish species, as long as the crab won’t consider them as food or vice versa. It will survive in freshwater, but brackish water is a better choice. The water quality should be hard and alkaline. Make sure that the lid is tight-fitting, since the Red-clawed crab will otherwise escape from the aquarium. Feed your Red-clawed crab dry food and vegetable matter. You don’t need a huge aquarium to house this crab, since it grows no larger than 7 centimeters (2.7 inches).

If you have problems with extensive algae growth in your aquarium, you add some of the smaller aquarium crabs to combat the problem. Two popular species used for algae control are the Scarlet Hermit Crab, the Dwarf Red Tip Hermit crab and the Dwarf Zebra Hawaiian Hermit crab. Such aquarium crabs are often sold combined with snails that will consume algae as well.

Aquariums – Then and now

The tradition of keeping fish and other aquatic creatures in captivity indoors goes back at least as far as the Roman Empire, and the Chinese began moving their gold carps back and forth between ornamental outdoor ponds and small indoor display containers during the Tang Dynasty (618-907). The word aquarium is a combination of the Latin word aqua, which most people know means water and the suffix -arium, which can be translates as “a place for relating to”.

This Latin origin of the word can be seen in many different languages and not only in romance languages like Spanish, Italian and Portuguese. The German and Dutch word for aquarium is for instance aquarium, Other European countries such as Sweden, Norway and Denmark has languages that only altered the speeling of the word a little bit to Akvarium. The term aquarium can also be found with only smaller varitions in a lot of none European languages such as akuarium in Bahasa a Indonesian language and akwaryum in Tagalog, a language spoken in the Philippines.

The earliest of the Roman aquariums were made from marble, but around the year 50 glass panes were incorporated in the design. One of the first species of fish to be displayed in Roman aquariums was the sea barble. Chinese aquariums were usually made out of porcelain and they were so important that the emperor himself greated a company for the production of big goldfish tubs.

Although occasional individuals continued to keep fish indoors after the fall of the Roman Empire, ornamental fish keeping didn’t really return to Europe until the 19th century. About 1830 Dr Nathaniel Ward invented a tank for keeping sensitive plants and tropical animals, the tank become known as an Wardian case. In the early 1840s Dr Ward started keeping aquatic plants but only with toy fish to begin with.

Another early example of aquarium keeping is from 1838 when French biologist Felix Dujardin noted owning a saltwater aquarium, although he did not use the term aquarium since it would take until 1854 before that name was introduced. The first balanced marine aquarium in London was set up and managed by Victorian marine zoologist Anna Thynne, who housed stony corals and seaweed. She was the first one the discover that coral in the genus Madrepora (“mother of pores”) have 3 different ways of reproducing. In 1850, the Chemical Society journal published an article on the keeping of goldfish, snails and eelgrass together in a 13-gallon container a feat accomplished by agricultural chemist Robert Warington.

The later Vicorian Era was a time when keeping fish and tropical fish quickly became more popular, more fashionable, this process gained a lot of momentum after the great exhibition of 1851 where an ornate cast iron framed aquarium was being displayed to the visitors. Two years after the exhibition, London Zoo opened the first large public aquarium in the world the Fish House.

I mentioned before that the term aquarium didn’t gain any widespread use before 1954 when Philip Henry Gosse used the term in his popular book “The Aquarium: An Unveiling of the Wonders of the Deep Sea”.

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