Home · Cyprinidae · Malabar flying barb
Malabar flying barb (Esomus malabaricus) — Cyprinidae

Malabar flying barb

Esomus malabaricus
Family: Cyprinidae

The Malabar flying barb (Esomus malabaricus) is a freshwater fish of the family Cyprinidae that grows up to 13 cm.

Length
12.5 cm
Water
Freshwater
Diet
Omnivore
Behaviour
Schooling
Activity
Diurnal
Body shape
Elongated (eel-like)
Substrate
Open water
Danger
Harmless

Description

The Malabar flying barb is a flying barb (Cyprinidae) from slow-flowing and still fresh water of southern India. The species grows to about 8 cm and has a slender, silvery body with a conspicuously long pair of barbels and large pectoral fins. As a social surface fish it swims in schools and snaps at insects falling on the water, larvae and small zooplankton; when threatened it can skim a short distance over the surface. The fish is harmless to humans.

Frequently asked questions

How do you recognise the Malabar flying barb?

The Malabar flying barb has an elongate, eel-like body and is mainly silver-grey.

Where does the Malabar flying barb live?

The Malabar flying barb lives in fresh water and is mostly found around open water.

How big does the Malabar flying barb get?

The Malabar flying barb grows to a maximum of about 13 cm.

Is the Malabar flying barb dangerous to humans?

No, the Malabar flying barb is harmless to humans.

Download Fin's Fish Guide

Identify fish in seconds, log your catches and dives. Join the TestFlight beta.

Get the beta →

All data

Identification

Dutch name
Malabar-vliegende barbeel sourced
English name
Malabar flying barb sourced
Scientific name
Esomus malabaricus
Family
Cyprinidae

Appearance

Size class
Small verified
Max length (cm)
12.5 verified
Body shape
Elongated (eel-like) sourced
Dominant colour
Silver / grey sourced
Tail shape
Forked inferred
Barbels
Yes sourced

Habitat & distribution

Water type
Freshwater sourced
Substrate
Open water sourced
Origin
Native inferred

Behaviour & biology

Diet
Omnivore inferred
Social behaviour
Schooling sourced
Territorial
No inferred
Activity
Diurnal inferred
Reproduction
Separate sexes inferred
Sexual dimorphism
No inferred

For anglers

Fishing method
Klein van stuk en nauwelijks een hengelsportdoel; wordt vooral incidenteel of als aasvis gevangen. inferred
Regulations source
FishBase ↗ inferred

Safety

Danger to humans
Harmless verified

Status & sources

Sources
FishBase via GBIF (DwC-A), CC-BY-NC 4.0

Same genus Esomus

More from the family Cyprinidae

Download Fin's Fish Guide

Identify fish in seconds, log your catches and dives. Join the TestFlight beta.

Get the beta →