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  2. Redtail catfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redtail_catfish

    The redtail catfish, Phractocephalus hemioliopterus, is a large species of South American pimelodid (long-whiskered) catfish. It is known in Venezuelan Spanish as cajaro ; in Guyana , it is known as a banana catfish , and in Brazil it is known as pirarara , [ 3 ] a fusion of words from the indigenous Tupi language : pirá and arara . [ 4 ]

  3. Gilded catfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilded_catfish

    This fish reaches 140 cm (55 in) in total length, and specimens measuring 130 cm (51 in) and weighing 50 kg (110 lb) are not rare. [4] These fish are mainly piscivorous, hunt at night, and sometimes go into flood-prone areas of rivers.

  4. Clarias magur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarias_magur

    Clarias magur is a species of freshwater airbreathing catfish from India and Bangladesh. It was recognized as species distinct from Clarias batrachus in 2008. [ 2 ]

  5. Aspredinidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspredinidae

    Because these catfish live in muddy environments, this behaviour has been hypothesised to give the eggs better access to oxygenated water. [ 11 ] Accounts of reproduction in Bunocephalus vary; some sources state that they are egg-scatterers without any parental care, while others note them to build a depression for a nest and guard the eggs.

  6. Types of fish in Uganda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_fish_in_Uganda

    The Semutundu Catfish (Bagrus docmak) is locally known as "Semutundu" and a species of the bagrid catfishes, i.e. the genus Bagrus. [6] In Uganda, it is widely distributed in the Rift Valley Lakes Edward, George, Albert, Victoria and the Nile system. It is grey-black above, creamy white below. It lives in both shallow and deep water.

  7. Upside-down catfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upside-down_catfish

    The name 'dwarf upside-down catfish' is also used for small (around 10 cm) species of the catfish genus Synodontis. In the aquarium trade, the name is almost always applied to S. nigriventris or species with which it may be confused, such as S. aterrima , S. contracta , and juvenile S. nigrita (adults of which are around 20 cm so are not "dwarf ...

  8. Pimelodidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pimelodidae

    The low-eye catfish (previously family Hypophthalmidae), and thus the genus Hypophthalmus, which contains four species, was reclassified with the pimelodids. [3] This family previously included fish that are now classified under Pseudopimelodidae (previously subfamily Pseudopimelodinae) and Heptapteridae (previously subfamily Rhamdiinae). [3]

  9. Channel catfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_catfish

    Channel catfish are native to the Nearctic and are well distributed in lower Canada, the eastern and northern United States, as well as parts of northern Mexico.They have also been introduced into some waters of landlocked Europe (the Czech Republic, and Romania) and parts of Malaysia, and almost as many parts of Indonesia. [6]

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