Photo thanks to
Name:
Scientific name: Pethia ticto
Common name: Ticto barb
AKA: Firefin barb/ Tic-tac-toe barb/ Two-spot barb
Mistakenly or previously labelled: Cyprinus ticto/ Barbus ticto/ Puntius ticto/ Rothee ticto/ Systomus ticto
Country of origin: Asia – Bangladesh; India; Nepal; Pakistan; Sri Lanka
pH: 6.0 – 7.5
Temperature: 18 - 25c
Hardness: 36 – 215 ppm
Water flow: standard - high
Oxygenation: standard
Maximum size: 6.5 cm
Diet: Live, frozen, flake & pellet foods – it is an omnivore. It does best with regular live food and some vegetable matter, such as spirulina and algae wafers.
Breeding:
Males: smaller, slimmer, brighter colours (especially the fins)
Females: larger, rounder, duller colours
They are an egg scatterer, and if provided with a mop or sufficient moss or plants, they can lay eggs, however they need to be kept from them by a division in the tank, or removal of the eggs or fish. They will not provide any care, so removal of the parents is still the best plan, as they will eat their eggs and fry. Breed in a separate tank in a pair or a group.
Lifespan: years
Tank companions:
They are NOT good tank companions with shrimps.
They are a schooling species. They should be kept in groups of 8+ to spread the aggression in the group.
Like tiger barb species (there are many similar looking fish with this common name), they have a nasty reputation for nipping (particularly other species), but this is often curbed by keeping them in a group. They should not be kept with species with long, trailing fins (such as bettas or paradise fish) for this reason.
These fish are closely related to the Systomus (tiger barb) species.
They are peaceful and shy. Other tankmates of a similarly peaceful nature & size are ideal, such as loaches, tetras that are large enough not to fit in their mouths, etc.
As with any fish they will eat any fish small enough to fit in their mouths, and equally can be eaten by any fish large enough to eat them. This should be taken into account when choosing tankmates.
Stocking plans can be checked with aqadvisor.com
Tank:
Minimum tank size is 2.5 ft for a small group. More room is needed for a larger group and/or tankmates.
They could be kept in a heavily planted tank with open areas for swimming, floating plants for cover, dark substrate and driftwood, or a biotype with sand (or 2Tone’s DIY substrate), rounded rocks, driftwood, plants and floating plants.
It is hardier than many other barbs, and a good fish for beginners.
Confused with:
There are other recognised species in the genus, which are allowable imports to Australia:
Puntius conchonius - Rosy Barb - Pethia conchonius
Puntius cumingii - Cummings Barb, Two Spot Barb – Pethia cumingii
Puntius nigrofasciatus - Ruby Barb/ Black ruby barb/ Purplehead barb - Pethia nigrofasciata
Pethia padamya - Odessa barb Puntius padamya/ Ruby barb/ Scarlett barb
Puntius ticto - Ticto Barb/ Cuming’s barb/ Twospot barb - Pethia ticto
Until recently these and many other genus were known as Puntius – this is still the genus name given on the allowable import list.
Be careful if buying from a store or calling the fish by its common name, as Pethia padamya, the Odessa barb is often labelled as this fish. P. ticto has a silver body with 2 black spots and does not have the red colouring on the body that P. padamya has. It is sometimes referred to as Cuming’s barb or the Odessa barb, with the same mislabelling.
Puntius ticto (previous synonym) are legal imports to Australia as of 27/01/2014 (list last updated 16/10/13).
http://www.environment.gov.au/system...mport-list.pdf
The IUCN Red List reports Puntius ticto (previous synonym) as a species which is of least concern, with an unknown population trend, at 01/02/2014:
http://www.iucnredlist.org/search
http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/166621/0
It is very important not to release any aquarium specimens into our waterways. Any that are not sold or re-homed/ given away, can often be re-sold to aquarium stores. If they are homed in ponds, care should be taken that they cannot escape in run-off into our waterways. Even if fish are native & local they should not be moved from one waterway to another, as this can transfer disease. If they are not local fish, they can both spread disease and either out-compete or eat local fish, shrimp & plants, causing their demise.
They are good fish for beginners +1.
Relevant threads:
Look impressive:
http://www.aquariumlife.com.au/showt...highlight=ruby
Wiped out a shrimp colony:
http://www.aquariumlife.com.au/showt...highlight=rosy
Feeder fish rescued:
http://www.aquariumlife.com.au/showt...highlight=rosy
Rosy barbs may eat hair algae:
http://www.aquariumlife.com.au/showt...highlight=rosy
Rosy barbs eat duckweed:
http://www.aquariumlife.com.au/showt...highlight=rosy
Systomus pentazona, Five banded barb:
http://www.aquariumlife.com.au/showt...highlight=barb
Filamentosa barb recommendation:
http://www.aquariumlife.com.au/showt...ia+filamentosa
References:
Fishbase:
http://www.fishbase.org/summary/Pethia-ticto.html
Seriously Fish:
http://www.seriouslyfish.com/south-a...-nomenclature/
http://www.seriouslyfish.com/species...h/Pethia+ticto
Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pethia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticto_barb
Pics & threads with pics:
Photo thanks to
DE
01/02/2014
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Pethia ticto - Ticto barb
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Created by:
DiscusEden
- Published: 01-02-14, 07:03 PM
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