Silver barb
(Barbonymus gonionotus)
Image source: Donald Lin | inaturalist.org
Classification
The Java barb, more commonly known as silver barb in aquaculture, is a species of ray-finned fish in the genus Barbonymus.
The Java barb has a strongly compressed body with an elevated back caused by an arched dorsal profile. It has a small head with a short, pointed snout and a terminal mouth, the snouts length is less than the diameter of the eye.
It has very small barbels, with the upper barbels being minute, even disappearing entirely.
The colour of fresh specimens is silvery white, occasionally tinted with gold. The dorsal and caudal fins are grey to grey-yellow while the anal and pelvic fins are pale orange with reddish tips and the pectoral fins are pale yellow.
It has very few tubercles on the snout and these are only visible when magnified.
The dorsal fin has four spines and eight soft rays while the anal fin has 3 spines and 6-7 branched rays.
The males can grow to 40.5 cm (15.9 in) in total length.
Natural distribution ranges from Vietnam, where it has been recorded in the Mekong Delta and Dong Nai River, through the basin of the Mekong to the Chao Phraya basin in Thailand. It is also found on Sumatra and Java and has been recorded from the Rajang River basin in Sarawak, Borneo. An introduced population has been found in Peninsular Malaysia.