This document provides information on common freshwater fish species found in Kerala, India. It begins with an introduction to fish taxonomy and the importance of fish as a food source in South Asia. The document then describes several important fish species found in Kerala's rivers and lakes, including the Peninsular Hill Trout, Hiffin Carp, Nash's Barb, Malabar Silurus, Boal, and various species of glassfish. It provides details on the physical characteristics, habitats, threats, and conservation status of each species. The document also includes background information on Kerala's geography, rivers and lakes, and key contributors to the study of Kerala's freshwater fish diversity.
Exotic fish introduction to india and their impact on indigenous speciesAshish sahu
The exotic varieties of fish have been found to encroach the natural water bodies and adversely affect the indigenous fish species. ... Owing to extensive practice of composite culture, three fast growing exotic fishes are introduced along with the three Indian major carps.
Exotic fish introduction to india and their impact on indigenous speciesAshish sahu
The exotic varieties of fish have been found to encroach the natural water bodies and adversely affect the indigenous fish species. ... Owing to extensive practice of composite culture, three fast growing exotic fishes are introduced along with the three Indian major carps.
A short description about magur fish.The walking catfish (Clarias batrachus) is a species of freshwater airbreathing catfish native to Southeast Asia, but also introduced outside its native range where it is considered an invasive species. It is named for its ability to "walk" across dry land, to find food or suitable environments. While it does not truly walk as most bipeds or quadrupeds do, it has the ability to use its pectoral fins to keep it upright as it makes a wiggling motion with snakelike movements.[2] This fish normally lives in slow-moving and often stagnant waters in ponds, swamps, streams and rivers, flooded rice paddies or temporary pools which may dry up
Identification and study of important cultivable FishesDr. Karri Ramarao
In India mostly major carps are use to cultivable freshwater fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable species are Catla catla, Labeo rohita, Cirrhinus mrigalaIn India mostly major carps are use to cultivable fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable saline water species areMugils, Lates etc,.
Many types of fish migrate on a regular basis, on time scales ranging from daily to annually or longer, and over distances ranging from a few metres to thousands of kilometres. Fish usually migrate to feed or to reproduce, but in other cases the reasons are unclear.
Migrations involve the fish moving from one part of a water body to another on a regular basis. Some particular types of migration are anadromous, in which adult fish live in the sea and migrate into fresh water to spawn, and catadromous, in which adult fish live in fresh water and migrate into salt water to spawn.
Marine forage fish often make large migrations between their spawning, feeding and nursery grounds. Movements are associated with ocean currents and with the availability of food in different areas at different times of year. The migratory movements may partly be linked to the fact that the fish cannot identify their own offspring and moving in this way prevents cannibalism. Some species have been described by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea as highly migratory species. These are large pelagic fish that move in and out of the exclusive economic zones of different nations, and these are covered differently in the treaty from other fish.
Salmon and striped bass are well-known anadromous fish, and freshwater eels are catadromous fish that make large migrations. The bull shark is a euryhaline species that moves at will from fresh to salt water, and many marine fish make a diel vertical migration, rising to the surface to feed at night and sinking to lower layers of the ocean by day. Some fish such as tuna move to the north and south at different times of year following temperature gradients. The patterns of migration are of great interest to the fishing industry. Movements of fish in fresh water also occur; often the fish swim upriver to spawn, and these traditional movements are increasingly being disrupted by the building of dams.
A short description about magur fish.The walking catfish (Clarias batrachus) is a species of freshwater airbreathing catfish native to Southeast Asia, but also introduced outside its native range where it is considered an invasive species. It is named for its ability to "walk" across dry land, to find food or suitable environments. While it does not truly walk as most bipeds or quadrupeds do, it has the ability to use its pectoral fins to keep it upright as it makes a wiggling motion with snakelike movements.[2] This fish normally lives in slow-moving and often stagnant waters in ponds, swamps, streams and rivers, flooded rice paddies or temporary pools which may dry up
Identification and study of important cultivable FishesDr. Karri Ramarao
In India mostly major carps are use to cultivable freshwater fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable species are Catla catla, Labeo rohita, Cirrhinus mrigalaIn India mostly major carps are use to cultivable fish and some catfish also use to culture. The important cultivable saline water species areMugils, Lates etc,.
Many types of fish migrate on a regular basis, on time scales ranging from daily to annually or longer, and over distances ranging from a few metres to thousands of kilometres. Fish usually migrate to feed or to reproduce, but in other cases the reasons are unclear.
Migrations involve the fish moving from one part of a water body to another on a regular basis. Some particular types of migration are anadromous, in which adult fish live in the sea and migrate into fresh water to spawn, and catadromous, in which adult fish live in fresh water and migrate into salt water to spawn.
Marine forage fish often make large migrations between their spawning, feeding and nursery grounds. Movements are associated with ocean currents and with the availability of food in different areas at different times of year. The migratory movements may partly be linked to the fact that the fish cannot identify their own offspring and moving in this way prevents cannibalism. Some species have been described by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea as highly migratory species. These are large pelagic fish that move in and out of the exclusive economic zones of different nations, and these are covered differently in the treaty from other fish.
Salmon and striped bass are well-known anadromous fish, and freshwater eels are catadromous fish that make large migrations. The bull shark is a euryhaline species that moves at will from fresh to salt water, and many marine fish make a diel vertical migration, rising to the surface to feed at night and sinking to lower layers of the ocean by day. Some fish such as tuna move to the north and south at different times of year following temperature gradients. The patterns of migration are of great interest to the fishing industry. Movements of fish in fresh water also occur; often the fish swim upriver to spawn, and these traditional movements are increasingly being disrupted by the building of dams.
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2. INTRODUCTION
“FISH are cold blooded aquatic vertebrates which breath by means of
pharyngeal gills, propelling and balancing themselves by means of fins”
(Jhingran, v.g).
History known from Indus-valley civilization itself.
Major food item (India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan etc.,)
Abundant
water resources
Improved
cultural practices
Easy
to catch
Biodiversity
is large
3.
More than 30700 sps. (India-2500)
More
More
than 11650 are marine.(India-1570)
than 8411 are fresh water.(India-930)
Even though the present status of many of the fishes is found to be, RARE,
THREATENED or ENDANGERED.
Dams
which altered the river hydrology
Introduction
Illegal
of „economically desirable‟ sps.
and unscientific exploitation
Researches are more worthy , if it is focused on needs of the people.
Scientific
documentation by inventory and systematic studies.
4. CONTRIBUTERS
Dr. Francis Day
„Fishes of Malabar‟‟(1865).
Dr. Sunderlal Hora
350 Papers on fish
Dr. A.G.K .Menon
Dr. K.C. Jayaram
5. KERALA – A PHYSIOGRAPHIC VIEW
Latitude – 8 º 18 ¹ -12 º 48 ¹
Longitude – 74 º 52 ¹ - 77 º 22 ¹
Area 38864km² (1.8% of India)
580km coastal area
14 Dist.
Population – 3,34,06,061
Capital – Trivandrum
Major cities – Cochin, Kozhikode, and Trivandrum
6. 3 Natural Zones
Lowland
Midland &
High land – (western ghats)
Highest peak „Anamudi‟ (2695 ft)
44 Rivers, Backwaters, Estuaries etc.
Kole wet lands of kuttanadu are unique to kerala.
Avg. rain fall – 2615mm
Temp. – upto 32ºc
8. Body - elongate, compressed, inferior, broad and transverse.
2 pair of small rostral and maxillary barbels.
Dorsal fin is short last unbranched ray
Scales are thin(54-60),arranged along lateral line so the name
„Brahmanakanda‟
Back is olive brown
Flanks and belly silvery
Threatened by
Declining habitat quality
Competition with exotic sps.
Pollution and
Dams
10. Dorsal region is almost dark and lateral region is greenish
Simple rays of all fins tipped with grey(except dorsal fin)
Caudal fin is dusky
Thretened by
Exotic species
Destructive fishing
Tourism
Hydroelectric power project &
pollution
12. Endemic to western ghats
Body, slightly compressed
Dorsal fin inserted closer to the snout tip
A dark lateral band is runs from the eye to caudal fin base, lateral line is
complete with 40-43 scales.
Golden- yellow flanks are bluish, abdomen is bright silvery. Dorsal fin Is
with a black blurred bloch on the anterior rays
14. First described from wayanad by Day in 1873.
Endemic to Western Ghats.
Inhabits fast flowing river, canals and streams(hides in holes on rocks).
Feeds on small fishes and crustaceans.
Short migrations for the purpose of breeding.
Threatened by –
Pollution
Decline in habitat quality
15. Wallago attu
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
SILURIFORMES
Family
SILURIDAE
Common name
BOAL
Malayalam name
VAALA, THOOLI
Commonly found in rivers
Voracious
Blackish above, pearly below, fins hyaline or more or less dusky below
Compressed body from side to side, head depressed.
Abdominal profile is more curved than that of back
Mouth is sub terminal, oblique, gape wide and its corner reaches far
behind the eyes
Two pairs of barbels present.
16. Hyporhamphus limbatus
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
BELONIFORMES
Family
HEMIRHAMPHIDAE
Coastal species sometimes strictly freshwater
Found at surface levels of tidal freshwaters
Feeds mainly on insects
Breeds twice in a year
23-37 gill rackers on the first gill arch
Greenish above with a silvery lateral stripe on the flanks, ventral side is
white, tip of the jaw is reddish, and fins are hyaline
18. Not reported in any protected area.
41-53 gill rackers on the first gill arch.
Greenish above and with a silvery lateral stripe on the flank, Ventral
side is white, Tip of the lower jaw is reddish, Fins are hyaline.
20. Scales are small
Lateral line is placed low
Dorsum is greenish and flanks are silvery and fading to whitish
below, caudal fins are dark at the tips
A lateral band is runs along the flank
22. Fin membrane between second and third dorsal spine is dusky blackish
in distal part
First dorsal spine is minute, second one is stronger and longer than the
other
Pectorals shorter than head, but longer than ventrals .
Caudal fin is deeply forked
Lateral line is continuous
Present In both fresh as well as brackish water habitats
24. Back and summit of head is greenish minutely dotted with fine black
points fading to silvery along the sides and abdomen,bright silvery line
passing from opercle to the centre of the tail.
Cheeks are silvery, fins are transparent with a yellowish tinge
Blackish between second and third dorsal spine
Caudal fin with a blackish margin
Iris silvery upper half is blackish
26. Scales are large and lateral line is interrupted in the middle and with
24-28 scales in longitudinal series.
12-15 scales are present before the dorsal fin.
Body is silvery with a bright longitudinal band
Common in coastal areas
28. Body is pale green above and glossy purple below
A black staining is seen in the membrane between 2nd and 3rd dorsal
spines
A dark stripe is present in the 2nd dorsal and anal fins
29. Parambassis dayi
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
PERCIFORMES
Family
CHANDIDAE
Common name
DAY‟S GLASSY
PERCHLET
Originally described as Parambassis dayi
by Bleeker(1874), from cochin Kerala
Distributed along the west coast of southern western Ghats
It attains a total length of 17.5 cm
Body is long and laterally compressed, supra orbital ridge is smooth and
with two spines on its posterior ridge
Sub orbital region is dentate
30. Mouth is moderate to large and the tongue is dentate
Lateral line is curved and complete with 30 scales, 15 scales are
present before the dorsal fin and six rows in the cheeks
It is silvery shot with purple.
The membrane between the 2nd and 3rd spine is dusky.
Soft dorsal, caudal and are dusky at their edges.
It is common in chalakkudypuzha and periyar
32. Body is long and compressed, lateral line is curved and complete with
40-42 scales,15 to 19 scales are present before the dorsal fin 4 rows in the
cheeks
It is greenish with a sikvery tinge .
Second dorsal spine is slightly dusky at its anterior side.
Fins are hyaline
Second dorsal fin is slightly dusky on its anterior side
34. Feeds on small fishes and invertebrates
Eggs are guarded and fanned by the male parent
Attains a maximum length of 30 cm
Gently silver in colour, with 4-6 dark horizontal lines ,black blotch behind
head and below dorsal origin and another infront of dorsal fin may be
present:caudal fin pale or slightly dusky
35. Originally described as Scieana jarbua by forsskal(1775)
Otherwise known as Target fish, Crescent prcch or Tiger bass is a Grunter
from the Indo-pacific
It is a aquarium trade
Grows up to a size of 36 cm
It get its name from the concentric circle pattern that can be seen from
above, resembling a target
Feeds on insects, plant matter, small fish , fish scales and crustaceans.
39. Caudal fin is rounded
Scales are ctenoid
Lateral line is interrupted with 46-57 scales in series
Body is greenish brown with brassy reflections
Three broad patchy blotches are present along the flanks
Fins - greenish or yellowish with narrow bands of spots across the soft
portions of dorsal, anal and caudal fins
The eye has two brown stripes passing through it;one running from the
mouth to the origin of the dorsal fin, and the other running from the throat to
the eye
The fins are grayish, also with brown marking
40. Etroplus maculatus
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
PERCIFORMES
Family
CICHILIDAE
Common name
ORANGE CHROMIDE
Malayalam name
PALLATHI
It is very common in paddy fields, or piece
of fresh water
It is yellowish with a greenish back, and about seventeen horizontal lines
of deep golden spots along the dorsal fin, the back, and the abdomen
occasionally a few also exist on the anal
Between the dorsal spines and rays there are more spots, some being
brown and others yellow.
41. Along the lateral line, there are three black finger markls, the central
one being the largest
Ventral and anal fins stained with a deep black
Scales are ctenoid same as in the E.suratensis
The pectoral fins arises close behind the opercle and the commencement of
the dorsal is slightly in advance of it, the finless space on the tail is short
Dorsal spines strong and occupying eleven fourteenths of the entire fin
Inter spinous membrane deeply notched and longer than the spines
Anal spines are strong , and occupying seven tenths of the entire base of
fin, the rays are the same as in the dorsal
Both dorsal and anal spines can be laid flat in a groove
43. Common in all pieces of freshwater
Grows up to a feet
It takes bite easily, but can‟t captured easily in net-it bury it self in the
mud
Specimens are of a deep purple colour, bands almost black, and white
spots on nearly every scales gleams like a small pearl;
Very young fish has a large black ocellus surrounded bye a white
margin, extending from the fourth to the tenth soft rays of the dorsal fin
44. Mouth is oval,very compressed and situated below the center of the
body
Profile rises abruptly to the base of the dorsal, but is rather concave
between the snout and the upper margin of the orbit, Lower profile not slightly
so rounded as upper.
Lower jaw is slightly the longest,Maxilla extends more than halfway to the
orbit
Preopercle oblique and entire
Nostrils are situated about midway between the eye and the snout
Scales are ctenoid, covering the opercles, none on the snout, between the
eyes, or on the orbitals, but they are extended on to the caudal, and along the
base of dorsal and anal fins in the form of a scaly sheath
45. Anabas testudineus
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
PERCIFORMES
Family
ANABANTIDAE
Common name
CLIMBING PERCH
Malayalam name
KAITHAKORA
Very good eating by the natives
They are to move in two ways through ground-either by lying on their
sides, flapping their tail and by moving their pectoral fins.
Will erect their scales and fins at pleasure , this willhelp themto climb
small distances-climbing perch
Accessory respiratory structures-helps to thrive in oxygen deficit
conditions, enable them to take short migrations
46. Body is long and compressed at the posterior region
Operculum is serrated with spines
Mouth is large-small conical teeth
Large scales-21-29 scales of lateral series
Greenish to dark on dorsal side and flanks, fading to pale yellow over
the ventral side
Well marked blotch at the base of caudal fin, black dot at the base of
pectoral fin, pectoral and caudal fin are dark grey
Common in all small water bodies
47. Gerres filamentosus
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
PERCIFORMES
Family
GERRIDAE
Common name
THREADFIN SILVER
BIDDY
Grows up to 8 inches in length
Body is compressed and elevated
Snout elevated, maxilla extends up to the first fourth of the orbit
Teeth can be found at the jaws as a velvety structure
Dorsal fin commences slightly behind the pectoral, but opposite the origin
of the ventral, and the anal opposite to the 4th ray of the dorsal
48. Pectoral is pointed, and is extends to above the first anal ray
Ventral spine weak, first ray prolonged
First spine of anal weak, and slightly longer than the 3rd, the rays gradually
decrease in length
Scales cover the body and opercles
Summit of the head and back pale greenish grey, rest of the body is silvery
with reddish reflections
Above and folowing the lateral line , there are two parallel series of large
oval blackish spots
Caudal is deeply forked, The posterior margin of the caudal pale blackish,
ventrals and pectorals white
Iris is pale golden
49. Channa orientalis
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
PERCIFORMES
Family
CHANNIDAE
Common name
WALKING SNAKE
HEAD
Commonly called Ceylon snake head
Some times may grow up to 4 inches
Predatory, mainly feeds on plankton, insects and some times small amphibians
They can breath in land for short periods-can survive in land for 4 days at wet
conditions
High tolerance to acidity
50. Mouth brooder, male carries the eggs while the female guard the territory during
this time male is less active, and often seen to the surface, fry is ejected via gill
openings
40-50 scales are present in longitudinal series, 12-13 scales are present before the
dorsal fin
Dorsum and flanks –green, ventral side-faint bluish colour
Dark oblique band –above and below the lateral line
Pectoral fin with alternating pale orange crescentic bands
Outer margin of the caudal fin is bright orange and barred, black ocellus at the
end of dorsal fin
This is the most important snake head in kerala
51. Eleotris fusca
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
PERCIFORMES
Family
ELEOTRIDAE
Grows up to 4 inches
Body broad in front, compressed behind, and nearly as wide across the
shoulder as it is high, abdominal profile is more curved than the back(nearly
straight)
Head is depressed, upper jaw oblique, and slightly protrusible, extending
posteriorly to the beneath the centre of the orbit, lower jaw horizontal
52. Preopercle with the posterior limb directed slightly backwards, its angle
rounded, sharp spine directed downwards and a little forwards, the horizontal
limb rather longer than the vertical one
Snout is short and depressed
Scales are exposed, quadrangular, extend over the body and upper surface of
the head as far as snout, where they are small, and on the opercles it is minute
Colour depends on inhabiting water, in clear water; back is lighter than
abdomen and pectoral fin with a black base
54. Body is greenish brown, a yeowish white streak passes from just above
the eye along the lateral line to the center of the caudal
Abdomen-dull yellowish white, with a number of blotchy markings
Caudal with a black bar at the base, and 4-5 lighter ones between that, anal
irregularly spotted
Dorsum - greenish or brown, flanks and ventralside - dull yellow
A few black bands radiate from the eyes that cross the jaws below
A light band running along the upper edge of the lateral line
Oblique bars or marbling are present on the body and vertical fins
Usually found in crevisces of the boulders and sandy or muddy bottoms of
the freshwater bodies
56. It is rich brown in colour with zigzag bands on the dorsal profile and
usually forms a network of brownish bands
Anterior part of the abdomen is dirty white, caudal and pectorals fins are
barred
Scales are very minute and covers the opercles and head
A row of black spot is present along the base of the dorsal fin
Dorsal fin with 32-40 spines and 64-92 branched rays
Pectoral fin is with 3-4 rows of discontinuous spots
57. Megalops cyprinoides
Class
ACTINOPTERYGII
Order
ELOPIFORMES
Family
MEGALOPIDAE
Common name
OX EYE TARPON
Malayalam name
PALAN, PALANKANNI
Otherwise known as indo-pacific tarpon
or ox eye
May grow up to 60 cm
The large mouth is turned upwards, lower jaw is prominent and contains
elongated hony plates,
The last ray of the dorsal fin is longer than the other and extend up to the
tail, caudal fin is deeply forked
58. Eyes are large and located at the middle of the head
It is dark greenish on the back and the flanks are silvery
Swim bladder is present
Spawns at sea and larvae anadromic in nature
Mainly feeds on smaller fish and crustaceans
It is known to live up to 44 years
59. CONCLUSION
India occupies the 9th position in terms of fresh water biodiversity
Kerala, as a part of India is blessed with all the components needed for the
existence of such a great ichthyodiversity
This topic very wider, but I mainly stressed on the fishes which are edible
Many of them are under threat due to the over exploitation and unscientific
fishing methods
The existing data are highly confusing, so many research works have to be
done to conserve existing sps., explore the new sps.