Generated via Deepmind Antigravity AI
Curated catalog
Papua rainbowfish
Melanotaenia papuae
A peaceful, active rainbowfish from southern Papua New Guinea, with the typically silver-green body that lights up with yellow, orange and blue reflections in mature males. Like all Melanotaenia, it is a tireless swimmer that needs long tanks with open space. In schools of 6–8+ the males' courtship displays transform the aquarium into a spectacle of light and movement. Adaptable to a wide parameter range. Classic genus breeding: egg-scatterer on mops or fine-leaved plants.
- Family
- Melanotaeniidae
- Origin
- Papua-Neuguinea
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
21 °C - 30 °C
7 - 8
Freshwater
Zona intermedia e superiore
6.5 cm
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic exclusively to a highly restricted geographical zone surrounding the capital city of Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea. Melanotaenia papuae (universally known as the Papuan Rainbowfish) natively colonizes heavily shaded, sluggish, and clear rainforest streams, tranquil tributaries, and small, isolated coastal river systems. These specific micro-habitats are characterized by dense, overhanging jungle canopies that deeply shade the water, massive beds of submerged aquatic vegetation, and stable, warm, slightly alkaline water.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Melanotaeniidae family (the true Rainbowfishes), it is a spectacular, deeply robust, and medium-sized schooling fish. Morphologically, fully mature adults reach roughly 6.0 to 8.0 centimeters (2.4-3.1 inches) in length, making them slightly smaller and more compact than the massive Boeseman's Rainbowfish. It possesses a classic, highly compressed, distinctively "torpedo-shaped" body profile. Its defining anatomical features are a steeply sloping forehead and the signature deeply split, twin dorsal fin.
Social Behavior:
They are exceptionally peaceful, incredibly active, and absolutely obligate shoaling fish. They strictly MUST be kept in a sizable group (absolute minimum 6, but 10-15+ is vastly superior to alleviate shyness and observe their social dynamics). In the aquarium, they possess boundless energy, spending their entire day relentlessly darting, chasing, and playfully weaving through the middle and upper levels of the water column. Dominant males are intensely competitive, constantly engaging in spectacular lateral sparring displays.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is spectacular and instantly obvious. Mature males are the undisputed focal point: their base body color is a glowing, intensely reflective metallic olive-green or deep turquoise. Their absolute defining feature is a series of thick, bold, brilliantly saturated fiery-orange or blood-red horizontal stripes running the entire length of their flanks, bordered by stark black lines. The fins of mature males become heavily flushed with deep red. Females are significantly smaller, possess a flatter back, and exhibit a vastly duller, pale silvery-yellow coloration.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly accommodate their energetic swimming speed while replicating a heavily shaded Papuan stream. A minimum 120-liter (30-gallon) tank (at least 90 cm / 3 feet long) is required. The tank MUST feature significant, unobstructed horizontal swimming lanes across the upper levels. However, unlike some open-water Rainbowfish, they heavily prefer heavily planted tanks; robust background plants (like Vallisneria) and floating vegetation to diffuse the lighting are highly recommended. A heavy, perfectly fitted lid is absolutely mandatory to prevent leaping.
Diet & Feeding:
They are highly active, voracious omnivores that forage aggressively in the mid-water column and at the surface. Because they swim relentlessly, they possess high metabolic rates and require frequent feeding. They will frantically consume almost anything offered: high-quality floating flakes and micro-pellets. To maintain their spectacular red and green striping, you MUST provide heavy daily offerings of live or frozen meaty foods (bloodworms, Daphnia, Artemia) combined with heavy plant-based offerings (spirulina flakes, blanched spinach).
Water Quality:
Originating from the coastal rainforest streams of Papua New Guinea, they demand highly stable, immaculate water conditions. They thrive in warm tropical temperatures (24-28°C / 75-82°F). Crucially, they require moderately hard, slightly alkaline water (GH 8-15) and a neutral to slightly alkaline pH (7.0 - 8.0). They possess absolute zero tolerance for dissolved organic waste; massive, rigorous weekly water changes are absolutely mandatory to prevent bacterial infections. Moderate water flow is highly appreciated to simulate a sluggish jungle stream.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is excellent, provided tankmates are peaceful and can tolerate their hyper-active behavior. They are the perfect centerpiece schooling fish for a dedicated, moderately hard-water community biotope. Excellent companions include other similarly-sized Rainbowfish species, fast-swimming Barbs, robust Tetras, and robust bottom-dwellers like large Corydoras or smaller Plecos. They MUST NEVER be housed with slow-moving, delicate, or long-finned fish (like Angelfish or Betta fish), as the Rainbowfish's frantic, relentless activity will severely stress them.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding is incredibly common, highly rewarding, and frequently happens by accident. They are prolific, continuous egg-scatterers that provide zero parental care. Breeding is triggered by heavy conditioning and a cool water change. A frantically colored dominant male will aggressively display, flashing an intensely bright "spawning stripe" down his forehead, driving the female into dense, fine-leaved mosses or spawning mops, where she releases adhesive eggs. The adults will relentlessly eat the eggs; the spawning medium MUST be moved to a separate tank.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is severe stress and physical injury from being confined in a tank that is too short; they will literally crash into the glass or suffer stunting if they cannot swim in long, open lanes (90+ cm). The second major risk is lethal leaping; they are notoriously explosive jumpers and will easily launch themselves out of the tank through the smallest gaps if the lid is not 100% secure. Finally, attempting to house them in extremely soft, highly acidic Amazonian blackwater will result in severe osmotic stress.
Fish profile
- Temperament
- Pacifico e attivo. Tenere in banchi di 6–8+
- Diet
- Onnivoro non schizzinoso: fiocchi e pellet per onnivori, artemia, dafnia, chironomus vivi o surgelati, verdure sbollentate, spirulina
- Tank level
- Zona intermedia e superiore
- Minimum group
- 6
- Adult size
- 6.5 cm
- Minimum tank
- 120 L
- GH
- n/a
- KH
- n/a
- TDS
- n/a
- Conductivity
- n/a
- Feeding frequency
- 2 volte al giorno
- Bioload
- Medium
- Flow
- Corrente moderata
- Jump risk
- Covered tank required
- Reproduction
- Oviparo a dispersione. Vasca dedicata con mop o muschio. Poche uova al giorno per settimane. Controllare quotidianamente. Schiusa in 7–10 giorni. Avannotti: infusori, poi nauplii di artemia.
- Compatibility
- Eccellente con altri arcobaleno, tetra robusti, danio, barbus, Corydoras.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Representative live aquarium/natural image from Melanotaenia lacustris (same genus) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Melanotaenia papuae.