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Climbing perch crawl through the night to find a new pond.
An extreme is the Indian climbing perch, which hardly ever goes into the water.
He also published notes from the museum such as one on the Indian climbing perch and its habit.
Climbing Perch may refer to:
Limped with him back to his tank, fed him, and retrieved the Climbing Perch from my rubber plant.
The Anabantidae are a family of perciform fish commonly called the climbing gouramies or climbing perches.
Anabas testudineus (Climbing perch)
Spirobranchus smithii (Many spined climbing perch)
The blackspot climbing perch (Ctenopharynx intermedius) is a species of fish in the Cichlidae family.
It belongs to the same genus as the Spotted Climbing Perch (Ctenopoma acutirostre) but looks very different.
Climbing perch family (Climbing gourami, Anabantidae)
Ctenopoma nigropannosum (twospot climbing perch)
Ctenopharynx intermedius (Blackspot Climbing Perch)
Fish found are fresh-water fish such as catfish, snake-headed fish, climbing perch, Nile tilapia, and various kinds of sea fish.
At night, climbing perch leave the water and travel across land to find other pools, and an ingenious ratel uses logs to reach a stricken kingfisher chick.
Ctenopoma multispine, known as the many-spined Ctenopoma or climbing perch, is an African freshwater fish.
Most fish transported live are placed in water supersaturated with oxygen (though catfish can breathe air directly through their gills and body skin, and the climbing perch has special air-breathing organs).
Anabas testudineus, the climbing perch, is a species of climbing gourami native to Asia where it occurs from India east to China and to the Wallace Line.
Other smaller labyrinth fish, such as the climbing perch, the kissing gourami, the snakeskin gourami, and other gouramies of the genus Trichogaster are local food fish in Southeast Asia.
Microctenopoma ansorgii is a small freshwater fish, known in the aquarium trade as the Ornate ctenopoma, Orange Ctenopoma, Ornate climbing perch, Pretty ctenopoma, or Rainbow ctenopoma.
Amphibious fish from this family are the Climbing perches, African and Southeast Asian fish that are capable of moving from pool to pool over land by using their pectoral fins, caudal peduncle and gill covers as a means of locomotion.