Hemigrammus bleheri

Hemigrammus bleheri is a species of characin found in Amazon Basin in Brazil and Peru. One of three species called rummy-nose tetra, but is also called firehead tetra according to FishBase. Reaching a standard length of 2" (5cm) it is a common species found in the aquarium trade although often potenially hybridised with the other collective rummy-nose tetra species Hemigrammus rhodostomus and Petitella georgiae; the false rummy-nose tetra.

Hemigrammus bleheri
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Characiformes
Family: Characidae
Genus: Hemigrammus
Species:
H. bleheri
Binomial name
Hemigrammus bleheri
Géry & Mahnert, 1986[1]

Etymology

Binomial, bleheri, honouring the species’ discoverer, Heiko Bleher.

Distribution

This species is found in the Rio Negro and Rio Meta basins.

Diet

Omnivorous and will accept just about anything offered. Species does have a small mouth so correspondingly sized foods are best. Feed a mixture of dried flakes and granules and small live and frozen foods. A varied diet such as this is essential for the best colour development.

gollark: There are nonmilitary schools with that, I'm sure.
gollark: You should have tried not going there, retroactively.
gollark: So basically, I would not take that figure very seriously.
gollark: The only source I can find is here (https://alfin2100.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-life-span-of-empires-250-years.html) and this has a dead link to an essay of some kind, and is apparently only aware of about 10 empires.
gollark: That seems like it's got to be a ridiculous overgeneralization of some kind. I'll check.

References

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