Payara

Species of fish From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The payara (Hydrolycus scomberoides) is a species of dogtooth tetra. This predatory fish is found in the Amazon Basin in tropical South America.[4][5] It was the first of four species to be described in the genus Hydrolycus.[6]

Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
Payara
at Toba Aquarium, Japan
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Characiformes
Family: Cynodontidae
Genus: Hydrolycus
Species:
H. scomberoides
Binomial name
Hydrolycus scomberoides
(Cuvier, 1819)[2]
Synonyms[3]
  • Hydrocyon scomberoides Cuvier, 1819
  • Cynodon pectoralis Günther, 1866
Close

Description

The most noticeable feature of H. scomberoides is the two long fangs protruding from its lower jaw. These are used to impale its prey, mostly smaller fish.[5] It typically reaches a standard length of about 30 cm (1.0 ft),[5][6][7] but can reach up to 51 cm (1 ft 8 in).[8] Reports exist of far larger individuals, up to 117 cm (3 ft 10 in) in total length[4] and 17.8 kg (39 lb 4 oz) in weight, based on records by IGFA,[9] but this likely involves confusion with the related H. armatus.[5][6]

H. scomberoides is overall silvery with a dark spot behind the opercle and another at the lower base of the pectoral fin. In adults, the tail is dusky on the basal half, turning paler (more transparent) towards the tip.[6][10]

In the aquarium

The payara, which is also sold as the sabertooth barracuda, vampire fish, vampire tetra, or sabertusk barracuda, is a popular species for large, aggressive aquaria. It requires a large aquarium and can only be mixed with relatively large species, as smaller fish will be seen as potential prey.[5]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI