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Additional information (Wiki):
Tetra are species of small
freshwater fish from Africa, Central
America and South America belonging to
the biological family Characidae and to
its former subfamilies Alestiidae (the "African
tetras") and Lebiasinidae. The
Characidae are distinguished from other
fish by the presence of a small adipose
fin between the dorsal fin and caudal
fin. Many of these, such as the neon
tetra (Paracheirodon innesi), are
brightly colored and easy to keep in
captivity. Consequently, they are
extremely popular for home aquaria.
The term tetra is not actually a
taxonomic, phylogenetic term. Because of
the popularity of tetras in the
fishkeeping hobby, many unrelated fish
are commonly known as tetras, including
species from differing families. Even
fish that are vastly different may be
called tetras. For example, payara (Hydrolycus
scomberoides) is occasionally known as
the "sabretooth tetra" or "vampire tetra".
Tetras generally have compressed (sometimes
deep), fusiform bodies and are typically
identifiable by their fins. They
ordinarily possess a homocercal caudal
fin (a twin-lobbed, or forked, tail fin
whose upper and lower lobes are of equal
size) and a tall dorsal fin
characterized by a short connection to
the fish’s body. Additionally, tetras
possess a long anal fin stretching from
a position just posterior of the dorsal
fin and ending on the ventral caudal
peduncle, and a small, fleshy adipose
fin located dorsally between the dorsal
and caudal fin. This adipose fin
represents the fourth unpaired fin on
the fish (the four unpaired fins include
the caudal fin, dorsal fin, anal fin,
and adipose fin), lending to the name
tetra, which is Greek for four. While
this adipose fin is generally considered
the distinguishing feature, tetras (such
as the emperor tetras, Nematobrycon
palmeri) lack this appendage.
Ichthyologists debate the function of
the adipose fin, doubting its role in
swimming due to its small size and lack
of stiffening rays or spines.
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