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Diagnostic Description

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Description: moderately slender; frontal profile slightly concave; neither sex has noticeably elongated dorsal or anal fin rays (Ref. 52307).Coloration: polychromatic color pattern unique among Tilapia; 6 color morphs currently recognized: dark blue, blue striped, olive, olive striped, pale blue and black; throat, belly and anal fin dusky to blackish in first 2 morphs mentioned; blue morph with blue head, body, dorsal and caudal fin; olive striped morph more bluish-silvery with olive-yellow dots and stripes on body, and with bluish mouth; pale morph with pale throat and some darker shading on belly, its flanks whitish to pale blue, upper parts of head, opercles and back are dusky blue, pelvic, dorsal, anal and caudal fins also pale except anterior part of dorsal fin which is dusky; "tilapia"-spot only visible in small specimens, absent from sub-adult and adult fish (Ref. 52307).
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Tobias Musschoot
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Life Cycle

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Nests are built on narrow rocky ledges and competition for these nest sites is very strong.
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Liza Q. Agustin
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Trophic Strategy

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Found in deep sinkhole lakes (100 m deep or more, e.g. introduced population in Lake Otjikoto, Namibia) with moderately clear water and with water temperatures ranging from 19 to 27°C. Feeds mainly on algae and diatoms.
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Drina Sta. Iglesia
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Biology

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Found in deep sinkhole lakes (100 m deep or more, e.g. introduced population in Lake Otjikoto, Namibia) with moderately clear water and with water temperatures ranging from 19 to 27°C (Ref. 6465). Omnivorous (Ref. 52307), but feeds mainly on algae and diatoms (Ref. 6465, 52307). Generally congregate, breed and feed from the near-vertical shores. Use narrow shelves for breeding, with established and defended territories, both parents guard and tend eggs. Threatened due to depletion of local groundwater resources and impact of introduced species (Ref. 7248). Individuals tend to display different color patterns ranging from pure black to mottled black and blue, pink and white (Ref. 27829). Biparental open-spawning species (Ref. 52307).
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Tess Cruz
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Importance

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fisheries: ; aquarium: commercial
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Otjikoto tilapia

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The Otjikoto tilapia (Tilapia guinasana) is a critically endangered species of cichlid fish endemic to Namibia where it was originally only found in Lake Guinas.[1][2] This very small sinkhole lake contains quite clear water that generally ranges between 18–25 °C (64–77 °F) depending on season,[3] and the Otjikoto tilapia has been seen down to depths of 67 m (220 ft).[1] Despite deriving its common name from the nearby Lake Otjikoto, it in not native to that lake, rather being an introduced species.[1] It is rare in the aquarium trade[4] and also kept in garden ponds in southern Africa.[3]

It is shoaling, but when breeding the pairs separate out, moving to the lake's vertical cliff edges where narrow ledges are used for breeding.[3] The eggs and young are aggressively guarded by the parents.[3] The Otjikoto tilapia mostly feeds on algae, including diatoms,[2] but it is an opportunistic omnivore and will also take invertebrates.[3]

The Otjikoto tilapia can reach a total length of up to 14 cm (5.5 in).[2] When breeding, the underparts become black.[3] Otherwise it is very variable in coloration, occurring in five main morphs, which are not sex-limited: olive, olive striped, dark blue, blue striped and light blue. The last is itself quite variable and may show some white, yellow or blotches in black.[5] There are minor genetic differences between the morphs and assortative mating occurs, especially in the olive and dark blue (possibly showing the very early stages of separation into distinct species).[5] Some pale individuals have a highly mottled appearance, giving the species the nicknames African koi and Nguni fish.[3] The distinct polymorphism is not seen in the introduced population in Lake Otjikoto.[4] It is very closely related to the banded tilapia (T. sparrmanii) and the two species can interbreed.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Bills, R. (2007). "Tilapia guinasana". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2007: e.T63354A12662434. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2007.RLTS.T63354A12662434.en. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Froese, Rainer; Pauly, Daniel (eds.) (2017). "Tilapia guinasana" in FishBase. April 2017 version.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g van Jaarsveld, E. (December 2013). Otjikoto Tilapia. Archived 2017-05-17 at the Wayback Machine South African National Biodiversity Institute. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  4. ^ a b SeriouslyFish: Tilapia guinasana. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  5. ^ a b Nxomani; Ribbink; and Kirby (1999). DNA profiling of Tilapia guinasana, a species endemic to a single sinkhole, to determine the genetic divergence between color forms. Electrophoresis 20: 1781—1785.

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Otjikoto tilapia: Brief Summary

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The Otjikoto tilapia (Tilapia guinasana) is a critically endangered species of cichlid fish endemic to Namibia where it was originally only found in Lake Guinas. This very small sinkhole lake contains quite clear water that generally ranges between 18–25 °C (64–77 °F) depending on season, and the Otjikoto tilapia has been seen down to depths of 67 m (220 ft). Despite deriving its common name from the nearby Lake Otjikoto, it in not native to that lake, rather being an introduced species. It is rare in the aquarium trade and also kept in garden ponds in southern Africa.

It is shoaling, but when breeding the pairs separate out, moving to the lake's vertical cliff edges where narrow ledges are used for breeding. The eggs and young are aggressively guarded by the parents. The Otjikoto tilapia mostly feeds on algae, including diatoms, but it is an opportunistic omnivore and will also take invertebrates.

The Otjikoto tilapia can reach a total length of up to 14 cm (5.5 in). When breeding, the underparts become black. Otherwise it is very variable in coloration, occurring in five main morphs, which are not sex-limited: olive, olive striped, dark blue, blue striped and light blue. The last is itself quite variable and may show some white, yellow or blotches in black. There are minor genetic differences between the morphs and assortative mating occurs, especially in the olive and dark blue (possibly showing the very early stages of separation into distinct species). Some pale individuals have a highly mottled appearance, giving the species the nicknames African koi and Nguni fish. The distinct polymorphism is not seen in the introduced population in Lake Otjikoto. It is very closely related to the banded tilapia (T. sparrmanii) and the two species can interbreed.

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