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Curated catalog
Powder-blue panchax
Pachypanchax omalonotus
A killifish endemic to Madagascar — the island-continent with a unique biodiversity. The male sports a powder-blue body with iridescent hues. Unlike annual Nothobranchius, Pachypanchax are non-annual (long-lived) killifish, making them more accessible. Surface-dwelling fish with an upward-facing mouth. Relatively robust for a Malagasy killifish, but requires clean, stable water. Conservation matters: nearly all Malagasy Pachypanchax are threatened by habitat loss.
- Family
- Aplocheilidae
- Origin
- Madagaskar
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
21 °C - 30 °C
6 - 7.5
Freshwater
Zona superiore (superficie)
9.5 cm
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic exclusively to the heavily threatened, localized river systems of northwestern Madagascar, specifically documented around the Sambirano River basin and the offshore island of Nosy Be. Pachypanchax omalonotus (the Powder Blue Panchax) is a highly adaptable, robust killifish species. It naturally colonizes deeply shaded, slow-moving rainforest creeks, completely stagnant forest pools, and the quiet margins of larger rivers, thriving in environments rich in overhanging vegetation and decaying leaf litter.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Aplocheilidae family, it belongs to the ancient, predatory Pachypanchax genus, a group of non-annual killifish strictly native to Madagascar and the Seychelles. Taxonomically, its specific name "omalonotus" roughly translates to "smooth-backed." Morphologically, it possesses a classic surface-dwelling predator profile: an elongated, powerful, cylindrical body with a distinctly flattened dorsal (top) surface and a wide, upward-facing mouth designed for snatching terrestrial prey.
Social Behavior:
They are bold, highly active, and exceptionally aggressive (particularly among males) surface-dwelling predators. Unlike peaceful schooling killifish, P. omalonotus establishes strict, violent hierarchies. Dominant males are intensely territorial, aggressively defending large surface areas and relentlessly driving away rival males. They are not schooling fish; they should be kept in a carefully managed harem (one male to three or four females) to disperse the male's relentless breeding aggression.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is absolute and stunning. Females are significantly smaller, plumper, and exhibit a highly camouflaged, plain olive-grey or brownish coloration with fully transparent fins. Males are spectacular aquatic predators. When dominant, the male’s entire body blazes with an intensely iridescent, metallic powder-blue, violet, or emerald-green base, heavily speckled with crimson or dark brown dots. The male's unpaired fins (dorsal, anal, and caudal) are extended and edged in striking black or stark white.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture must perfectly replicate a shaded, highly structured Malagasy rainforest pool. A minimum 80-liter tank is strictly required to manage male aggression. The tank MUST feature an exceptionally tight-fitting, heavily sealed lid, as they are notoriously powerful, precision jumpers. The layout absolutely demands a dense, impenetrable canopy of floating plants (like Water Sprite or Salvinia) and thickets of tall background plants reaching the surface to provide secure hiding spaces for females.
Diet & Feeding:
In their natural rainforest streams, they are apex micro-predators, hunting exclusively at the water's surface for terrestrial insects (ants, flies, small spiders) that fall from the canopy, as well as aquatic insect larvae. In captivity, they are ravenous, highly aggressive surface feeders. While they will accept high-quality floating carnivore pellets, their diet MUST be heavily based on live and frozen meaty foods. Offer gut-loaded fruit flies (Drosophila), bloodworms, mosquito larvae, and adult brine shrimp.
Water Quality:
Originating from diverse Malagasy habitats, they are incredibly hardy and highly adaptable to various water conditions, making them excellent for experienced aquarists. They thrive in standard tropical temperatures (23-28°C) and can adapt to a wide pH range (pH 6.5 - 8.0), tolerating moderately hard water exceptionally well. Because they are strictly surface dwellers that naturally inhabit stagnant forest pools, filter flow MUST be very gentle; strong surface agitation will severely stress them.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is highly restrictive due to their aggressive, predatory nature. They possess large mouths and will swallow any fish that fits (like Neon Tetras or Guppies). They will fiercely outcompete timid surface feeders. Excellent tankmates must be robust, similarly sized, and strictly occupy the middle or bottom water column. Suitable companions include medium-sized Barbs, robust Corydoras, or medium-sized peaceful Cichlids. Never house multiple males together unless the tank exceeds 150cm.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding is relatively straightforward in a dedicated setup. They are non-annual, continuous plant-spawners. Condition a harem with heavy live foods. The dominant male will relentlessly drive females into dense thickets of floating roots or artificial woolen spawning mops near the surface. The female deposits relatively large, tough, highly adhesive eggs daily. Adults are notorious egg and fry predators; the spawning mop MUST be removed to a separate hatching tank every few days.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is jumping out of the aquarium; an uncovered tank guarantees a dried-out fish on the floor within days. The second major risk is severe physical injury (torn fins, stress-induced exhaustion) resulting from housing multiple males together in cramped quarters, or failing to provide enough hiding spaces for heavily harassed females. Medically, they are virtually indestructible if provided with clean water and a high-protein diet.
Fish profile
- Temperament
- Generalmente pacifico. Maschi possono essere territoriali. Predatore di superficie per insetti e piccoli invertebrati
- Diet
- Prevalentemente carnivoro: cibo vivo e surgelato — artemia, dafnia, chironomus, larve di insetto. Accetta fiocchi galleggianti e micro-pellet
- Tank level
- Zona superiore (superficie)
- Minimum group
- 2
- Adult size
- 9.5 cm
- Minimum tank
- 60 L
- GH
- n/a
- KH
- n/a
- TDS
- n/a
- Conductivity
- n/a
- Feeding frequency
- 2 volte al giorno
- Bioload
- Low
- Flow
- Corrente debole
- Jump risk
- Covered tank required
- Reproduction
- Non annuale (senza diapausa). Deposizione su piante galleggianti e mop. Rimuovere uova o genitori. Schiusa in 10–14 giorni. Avannotti: nauplii di artemia.
- Compatibility
- Vasca monospecifica ideale. Può convivere con pesci pacifici di fondo. Può mangiare pesci o gamberetti molto piccoli. Specie di conservazione.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Exact live/aquarium image selected from Wikimedia Commons for Pachypanchax omalonotus.
Exact live/aquarium image selected from Wikimedia Commons for Pachypanchax omalonotus.
Representative live aquarium/natural image from Carnegiella strigata (same catalog section FISH) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Pachypanchax omalonotus.