Clown Barb
Genus name: Barbus Everetti
Also known as: Everett's Barb
Distribution: Singapore and
Borneo
Length: up to 6" (15cm)
Minimum Tank Length: 36" (90cm)
Water Temperature: 77-81F (25-27C)
Diet: Worms, crustaceans, plant matter,
dried food, insects
Water: Fairly soft water
Lives: mostly in the lower areas of
the aquarium
Breeding: Egg Layers
Community Tank
The Clown Barb is a hardy
Asiatic Barb that has two pairs of barbels. The
Clown Barb's back is brownish or red-brown, sometimes with
an orange tinge, and the abdomen is almost white.
The flanks are reddish with golden or silvery iridescence
and marked with somewhat irregular black or blue-grey
vertical markings.
Unlike many of the other related species, the Clown Barb
does not have a dark stripe running through the eye. The
female Clown Barb is slightly larger and stouter than the male,
and is also less colourful.
The Clown Barb is a lively barb which mainly lives in the
lower layers of the aquarium, and it is best to keep a few
together as they like to shoal. The aquarium should have
marginal vegetation, but the plants should have tough leaves,
as the Clown Barb is a leave nibbler.
The Clown Barb is not an easy fish to breed in captivity,
although it can be done. Experience has shown that the
best way to breed Clown Barbs is firstly to keep the
prospective breeding fish apart for about three weeks.
During this time give them a varied and plentiful diet of
white worms, insect larvae, and greens such as
lettuce.
When put back together, hopefully the Clown Barbs will
spawn, and they do this generally in the sunshine on the early
morning, and preferably among fine-leaved plants. As you
would expect, the eggs and young of the Clown Barbs are not
looked after, or safe from their parents.
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