Pale Chub
(Zacco platypus)
Classification
The pale chub (Zacco platypus), also known as pale bleak or fresh-water sprat, is one of the most extensively distributed Asiatic cyprinids and is found in Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and most of Southeast China.
This species of fish is native to freshwater rivers and mountainous streams from northern China and Korea to northern Vietnam.
They can grow up to 20 centimetres (7.9 in) but usually grow to 13 centimetres (5.1 in).
Its diet consists of zooplankton, invertebrates, fish, and debris.
The pale chub has a moderately large head with moderately large eyes that are located on the upper side of the head. They have a large mouth, so much so that the posterior end of the jaw reaches the anterior part of the eye. The pale chub has an elongated body that is more compressed at the posterior end and have a black longitudinal band.
The moderately large cycloid scales that are much larger on the sides than on other parts of the fish, and they have a complete lateral line. They have a forked caudal fin where its upper edge is shorter than the lower.
Their fins are bright yellow on the pelvics and dirty on the pectorals and caudal fin. They have a grayish coloration close to the dorsal with the rest of the body being silvery.
Zacco platypus have 7 dorsal fin rays and it is located near the midline between its snout tip and caudal peduncle end. Each spine of the first dorsal fin is slightly extended, and the first spine of the male fish is extended similarly like a thread; the edge of the second dorsal fin is straight, and the rays are all branched out. They have elongated anal fin rays with its longest reaching the caudal peduncle with 8-10 anal fin rays and 7-9 pelvic fin rays.
They have one lateral line with 42-46 lateral line scales with 6.5-8.5 scales above it and 3 scales below the lateral line. There is a transverse lateral line in the occipital area which connects the lateral lines on both sides.
When spawning, the males will have 10 or more vertical strips that are bluish in color.
The pale chub live primarily in freshwater. The adults prefer shallow waters with a rapid water flow and tend to hide in cracks between rocks in order to remain in water areas with high food availability and low predation. They do not really like deep, stagnant water. They live in waters that have an average of 23–24 °C (73–75 °F). They mainly live by the bottom when adults because that is where their food source is located. However, due to environmental changes and pollution, tis population is shrinking in many places.