Anabas testudineus
FAMILY
Anabantidae
TAXONOMY
Anthias testudineus Bloch, 1785, Japan. The diverse
DISTRIBUTION
and morphology of A. testudineus indicate that it may comprise
more than one species.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
French: Perche grimpeuse; German: Kletterfisch; Spanish:
Perca trepadora.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Length 9.8 in (25 cm). Robust body with wide, large head.
Body shape ranges from oval and compressed to elongate and
subcylindrical. Posterior edges of opercular bones, especially
opercle, and subopercle, with strong spination. Without teeth
on the palatine in contrast to most anabantids. Dorsal fin has
16–19 strong spines and 7–11 soft rays. Anal fin has 9–11
spines and 8–12 soft rays. Pelvic girdle without connection to
pectoral girdle. Scales on the head rigidly attached to the
skull bones. Scales strongly ctenoid. Lateral line interrupted
at level of posterior part of spinous dorsal fin and continued
two scale rows lower down to caudal peduncle. Suprabranchial
organ exceptionally large and complexly folded.
Coloration light beige with darker spots. A conspicuous black
spot at the posterior edge of the gill cover between two
prominent areas of projecting strong opercular spines and a
large black ocellus on the caudal peduncle. No sexual dimorphism
or dichromatism.
DISTRIBUTION
Widely distributed in Asia: Sri Lanka, India, Burma, Indochina,
Taiwan, Sundaland (the western part of Indonesia,
namely the islands of Java, Sumatra, and Kalimantan), but also
introduced east of Huxley’s Line (a zoogeographic
DISTRIBUTION
al
divide between the fauna of peninsular Southeast Asia
and the Sunda islands [Sumatra, Java, and Borneo], and the
fauna located on islands further to the east such as Australia,
Papua New Guinea, Sulawesi, and the Philippines). This wide
DISTRIBUTION
al range and the diverse physical morphology encountered
indicates that more than one species is most certainly
involved, but this species has not been thoroughly
studied. The climbing perch has also been accidentally released
in the United States.
HABITAT
Found in all types of fresh water, also survives in brackish water
and tolerates water conditions unsuitable for most other
fishes.
BEHAVIOR
Well known for its
BEHAVIOR
to travel overland, first reported
more than 200 years ago; uses its spiny opercular bones and a
side-to-side wriggling of the body to move itself forward on
land. Obligatory air breather that drowns if kept from rising to
the surface to gulp air. Can survive longer periods of drought
buried in the mud of the drying water bodies.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Omnivorous. Feeds on macrophytic vegetation, different invertebrates,
and small fish.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
No parental care. Typical spawning clasp lasts only a few seconds.
Several thousand, buoyant, small (0.04 in; 1 mm) spherical
eggs are spawned during one spawning phase. Eggs contain
a single large oil globule. Hatching occurs after 24 hours at
82.4°F (28°C).
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not listed by the IUCN.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
A common and popular food fish in Southeast Asia. Easily
transported to the markets in buckets without water as long as
the skin is kept moist, and it may survive in this condition for
several days.
Copyright © 2016-2017 Animalia Life | All rights reserved