Arowana

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Arowana
Osteoglossum bicirrhosum.JPG
Silver arowana, Osteoglossum bicirrhosum
Scientific classification
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Osteoglossidae

Bonaparte, 1832
Genera

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Arowanas are freshwater bony fish of the family Osteoglossidae, also known as bonytongues[1] (the latter name is now often reserved for Arapaimidae).[2] In this family of fish, the head is bony and the elongated body is covered by large, heavy scales, with a mosaic pattern of canals. The dorsal and anal fins have soft rays and are long based, while the pectoral and ventral fins are small. The name "bonytongues" is derived from a toothed bone on the floor of the mouth, the "tongue", equipped with teeth that bite against teeth on the roof of the mouth. The arowana is a facultative air breather and can obtain oxygen from air by sucking it into its swim bladder, which is lined with capillaries like lung tissue.[3]

Evolution

Osteoglossids are basal (primitive) fish from the lower Tertiary and are placed in the actinopterygiid order Osteoglossiformes. As traditionally defined, the family includes several extant species from South America, one from Africa, several from Asia, and two from Australia.[1] Today Arapaimidae is often regarded as a separate family, which includes the arapaimas and the African arowana.[2] Consequently, the South American genus Osteoglossum, and the Asian and Australian genus Scleropages are the only extant genera that remain in the osteoglossid family.[4] Arapaimidae and Osteoglossidae split about 220 million years ago (Mya), during the Late Triassic.[5]

Within Osteoglossidae, the South America Osteoglossum arowanas diverged from the Asian and Australian Scleropages arowanas about 170 Mya, during the Middle Jurassic.[5]

The Osteoglossidae are the only exclusively freshwater fish family found on both sides of the Wallace Line.[6] This may be explained by the theory that Asian arowanas (S. formosus) diverged from the Australian Scleropages, S. jardinii and S. leichardti, about 140 Mya, making it likely that Asian arowanas were carried to Asia on the Indian subcontinent.[7][5]

Fossil record

At least five extinct genera, known only from fossils, are classified as osteoglossids; these date back at least as far as the Late Cretaceous. Other fossils from as far back as the Late Jurassic or Early Cretaceous are widely considered to belong to the arowana superorder Osteoglossomorpha. Osteoglossomorph fossils have been found on all continents except Antarctica.[8] These fossil genera include Brychaetus, Joffrichthys, and Phareodus.

Behavior

Osteoglossids are carnivorous, often being specialized surface feeders. They are excellent jumpers; Osteoglossum species have been seen leaping more than 6 ft (almost 2 m) from the water surface to pick off insects and birds from overhanging branches in South America, hence the nickname "water monkeys". Arowana species typically grow to around 2 to 3 ft in captivity.

Several species of osteoglossids exhibit parental care. They build nests and protect their young after they hatch. All species are mouthbrooders, the parents holding sometimes hundreds of eggs in their mouths. The young may make several tentative trips outside the parent's mouth to investigate the surroundings before leaving permanently.

In the aquarium

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Arowanas are solitary fish and only allow company while young; adults may show dominance and aggression. Some compatible species often partnered with this fish are clown knifefish, pacu, oscars, jaguar cichlids, green terrors, gar, tinfoil barb, Siamese tigerfish, and any other somewhat aggressive fish that cannot fit in the arowana's mouth. These fish are best kept with live or frozen feed and they easily outgrow the tank within 8 to 10 months. An aquarium of at least 150 gallons is preferable.[9] Australian species are best kept alone in aquaria.[10][11]

Etymology

The name comes from the Indonesian language arwana or nirwana, meaning fish of paradise.[12]

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2014). "Arapaimidae" in FishBase. July 2014 version.
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  4. Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2014). "Osteoglossids" in FishBase. July 2014 version.
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External links

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