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As
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Foster & Smith (same company) ended their online sales business, due to
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because we will have more tank raised fish shortly,
15 years of selling tropical fish online and
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Odessa
Barb
Native Region:
Vietnam, Mekong Delta area - Occurs mainly in heavily shaded
streams and rivulets, preferring shallow, slow-flowing water with silt substrate
and leaf debris
Temperament: Community. Easy care, but
competitive among their own kind.
Feeding:
Staple foods, vegetable
flakes, thawed adult brine shrimp, and live foods. However, vegetable matter is a heavy
influence in their diet in the wild.
Sexing: Male is larger and turns
bright red, orange or pink near spawning time.
General Comments:
The Odessa Barb is
sometimes known as the Scarlet Barb, and the body of the female is silver and
pink with a black spot above the pectoral fin. The male is black to silver in
coloration and has a beautiful bright red stripe running horizontally from
the head to the tail. They are very beautiful and lively fish that prefer to be
in schools.
They do prefer a well-planted tank of at least 30 gallons with soft, slightly
acidic water. Rocks and driftwood can be added to the aquarium, but leave plenty
of space for swimming. The Scarlet Barb is a very active fish that may pester or
even nip the fins of larger, slower moving fish.
It is best, when trying to breed the Odessa Barb, to house a number of Barbs
in the same aquarium until they pair off. After a pair has developed, the female
will lay her eggs and the male will follow behind to fertilize. The fry will be
free-swimming after about 5 days. Feed the fry newly hatched brine shrimp until
large enough to accept crushed flake food.
The Odessa Barb needs to be fed a variety of foods including vegetables as
well as meaty foods. Feed a quality flake food as well as freeze dried, live,
and frozen foods such as brine shrimp and bloodworms.
Breeding Cherry Barbs
and Raising Fry (Opens a new
browser window for members of Aquarium-Club.com)
Other Barb Species
(Opens a new browser window for members of Aquarium-Club.com)
General Aquarium Reference Books:
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