
Also known as Asian snakeheads
Channa is a genus of predatory fish in the family Channidae, commonly known as snakeheads, native to freshwater habitats in Asia. This genus contains about 50 scientifically described species. The genus has a wide natural distribution extending from Iraq in the west, to Indonesia and China in the east, and parts of Siberia in the Far East. A particularly high richness of species exists in Myanmar (Burma), Bangladesh and northeastern India, and many Channa species live nowhere else. In contrast, a few widespread species have been introduced to several regions outside their natural range, where
GENUS
鱧屬(Channa)是鱧科下的一個屬,其下有33個種。包括烏鱧、小盾鳢的很多種都很出名。其分佈極廣,幾乎遍及整個亞洲。其下的魚除去食用外,還有藥用價值,也是常見的觀賞魚。該屬的魚是食肉動物,以蛙、蛇、鳥以及齧齒類動物為食,可以呼吸空氣。 Channa這一命名並不完善,關於其的研究也不甚全面,2010年種系發生研究顯示,在東南亞可能還存在著未被描述的鱧屬魚類。[1] 2011年6月,印支半島的紅鱧(Channa diplogramma)被發現是一個獨立的本土物種,其親緣關係可能與小盾鱧(Channa micropeltes)接近,大約952萬到2176萬年前是一個種。[2][3] 種 該屬下現有33種:[4] 雙棲鱧(Channa amphibius) 阿薩姆鱧(Channa andrao/Channa sp. Assam) 烏鱧(Channa argus) C. a. argus (Cantor, 1842) C. a. warpachowskii (L. S. Berg, 1909) 沃氏鱧(Channa argus warpachowskii) 七星鱧(Channa asiatica) 橙斑鱧(Channa aurantimaculata) 斑卡鱧(Channa bankanensis) 巴兰鱧(Channa baramensis) 巴卡鱧(Channa barca) 布氏鱧(Channa bleheri) 緬甸鱧(Channa burmanica) 鈍吻鱧(Channa cyanospilos) 紅鱧(Channa diplogramma) 緣鱧(Channa gachua) 茵列鱧(Channa harcourtbutleri) 帶鱧(Channa lucius) 鱧魚(Channa maculata) 似眼鱧(Channa marulioides) 眼鱧(Channa marulius) 巨鱧(Channa marulius ara) 黑鰭鱧(Channa melanoptera) 黑斑鱧(Channa melanostigma) 黑體鱧(Channa melasoma) 小盾鱧(Channa micropeltes) 夜鱧(Channa nox) 東方鱧(Channa orientalis) 飾鰭鱧(Channa ornatipinnis) 帕瑙鱧(Channa panaw) 豹紋鱧(Channa pardalis) 側眼鱧(Channa pleurophthalmus) 美鱧(Channa pulchra) 翠鱧(Channa punctata) 斯氏鱧(Channa stewartii) 線鱧(Channa striata) 參考文獻 Channa. Integrated Taxonomic Information System. [6 Ju
via GBIF
Channa is a genus of predatory fish in the family Channidae, commonly known as snakeheads, native to freshwater habitats in Asia. This genus contains about 50 scientifically described species. The genus has a wide natural distribution extending from Iraq in the west, to Indonesia and China in the east, and parts of Siberia in the Far East. A particularly high richness of species exists in Myanmar (Burma), Bangladesh and northeastern India, and many Channa species live nowhere else. In contrast, a few widespread species have been introduced to several regions outside their natural range, where they often become invasive. The large and medium-sized Channa species are among the most common staple food fish in several Asian countries, and they are extensively cultured. Apart from their importance as a food fish, snakeheads are consumed in some regions as a traditional medicine for wound healing and reducing postoperative pain and discomfort, and collected for the international aquarium pet trade.
All snakeheads are highly predatory, and the diets of the various species of Channa include fish, amphibians (like frogs), snakes, rodents, birds, and invertebrates (insects and crustaceans). They have a labyrinth organ, which allows them to breathe air for short periods, and they use this adaptation to travel across land in the event that their habitat becomes inhospitable. They are mostly solitary or live in monogamous pairs that are highly aggressive towards outsiders of their own species, but C. pleurophthalma often occurs in small groups. Larger species are mostly nestbrooding (making a nest of vegetation at the water surface), and the dwarfs mostly paternal mouthbrooding, but exceptions occur; the large C. barca is a paternal mouthbrooder and the dwarf C. bleheri is a free-spawner (the eggs float to the surface where the parents take care of them, but they do not mouthbrood or built a nest).
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).