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FishFreshwaterBrackishEasy

Curated catalog

Indian glassfish

Parambassis lala

A completely transparent fish: through the glassy body you can see the skeleton, internal organs and swim bladder — a living anatomy lesson effect. Native to India and Southeast Asia. Small (2.5–3 cm) and gregarious, must be kept in groups of 6–8+. Strictly freshwater (the brackish water myth is false). Micropredator: almost always refuses dry food — live or frozen food diet mandatory. WARNING: never buy artificially 'colored' specimens — the dyeing is a painful and lethal practice.

Family
Ambassidae
Origin
Thailand, Myanmar, Indien
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

21 °C - 30 °C

pH

6 - 8

Water type

Freshwater / Brackish

Tank level

Zona intermedia

Adult size

4 cm

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

Endemic to a broad geographical range across the heavily vegetated, sluggish freshwater systems, slow-moving rivers, flooded agricultural plains, and intensely stagnant, shallow ponds of the Ganges and Brahmaputra river basins in India, Bangladesh, and Myanmar. Parambassis lala (universally known as the Indian Glassy Fish or Highfin Glassy Perchlet) natively colonizes heavily shaded, highly structured micro-habitats. These environments are characterized by massive tangles of submerged roots, dense aquatic vegetation, and water that is frequently turbid (muddy) but completely devoid of strong currents.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Ambassidae family (the Asiatic Glassfishes), it is a spectacular, biologically fascinating, and completely transparent micro-predator. Morphologically, fully mature adults reach roughly 3.5 to 4.0 centimeters (1.4-1.6 inches) in length. It possesses a deeply compressed, highly elevated, and almost disc-like body profile. Its absolute defining, astonishing anatomical feature is its complete lack of pigmentation: its body is entirely transparent, allowing the viewer to clearly see its skeletal structure, spine, ribs, and internal organs (enclosed in a silvery sac).

Social Behavior:

They are highly active, entirely peaceful, and absolutely obligate shoaling micro-fish. Unlike larger, predatory glassfishes, Parambassis lala are highly gregarious and deeply timid. They strictly MUST be kept in a sizable group (absolute minimum 6, but 10-15+ is required to alleviate their intense shyness and encourage them to swim in the open). In the aquarium, they spend their entire day hovering nervously and darting through the middle levels of the water column, relying entirely on their transparency for camouflage against predators.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is distinct and visually striking when mature. While both sexes possess the iconic, completely transparent, glass-like body, mature males are the undisputed stars: their immensely enlarged dorsal and anal fins develop a spectacular, highly contrasting black or deep blue border, heavily edged with bright metallic blue or silvery-white. Females remain almost entirely transparent and lack the intense black and blue fin edging. Crucial Note: This species is frequently subjected to the barbaric practice of artificial "dye-injection" (painting) in the trade; avoid neon-colored specimens.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly replicate a tranquil, heavily planted, and deeply structured Indian river margin. A minimum 60-liter (15-gallon) tank (at least 60 cm long) is required. The absolute most critical requirement is overwhelming, dense vegetation and line-of-sight breaks to alleviate their intense nervousness. The tank MUST be densely packed with tall background plants (like Vallisneria or Cryptocoryne) and massive tangles of branching driftwood. They require open swimming space in the center, flanked by dense cover. A dark substrate enhances their subtle fin coloration.

Diet & Feeding:

They are highly specialized, intensely deliberate micro-predators (carnivores). They are notoriously picky and will frequently categorically reject standard commercial dry flakes or pellets. You MUST feed them a heavily varied, high-protein meaty diet. They hunt by hovering and suddenly striking at tiny suspended prey. Daily, heavy offerings of live or high-quality frozen foods are absolutely mandatory: massive amounts of Daphnia, Cyclops, newly hatched Artemia (brine shrimp), and small bloodworms. Failure to provide live or frozen food will rapidly result in lethal starvation.

Water Quality:

Originating from the sluggish freshwater basins of India, they strictly demand highly stable, immaculate, and moderately hard water. They thrive in warm tropical temperatures (23-28°C / 73-82°F). Crucially, they strictly require moderately hard to hard water (GH 8-15) and a slightly alkaline pH (7.0 - 7.5). They possess absolute zero tolerance for dissolved organic waste; rigorous weekly water changes are absolutely mandatory. The water flow MUST be extremely gentle and heavily diffused; strong, turbulent currents will violently exhaust them and cause severe stress.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is strictly limited by their incredibly fragile nature, tiny size, extreme shyness, and requirement for slow-moving, hard water. They are the perfect, completely peaceful mid-level fish for a dedicated Asian biotope. Excellent companions include peaceful, hard-water tolerant micro-fish (like small Rasboras or Danio species), and peaceful bottom-dwellers. They MUST NEVER be housed with fast, aggressive, or large predatory fish (like Angelfish, Tiger Barbs, or large Cichlids) that will easily swallow them whole or bully them relentlessly.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is exceptionally difficult, highly rewarding, and requires a dedicated, pristine, hard-water spawning tank. They are continuous egg-scatterers that provide zero parental care. Breeding is triggered by heavy conditioning with live foods and a slight temperature increase. A male with intensely darkened fin edges will aggressively display, driving the female into dense tangles of fine-leaved mosses, where they scatter hundreds of microscopic, adhesive eggs. The adults are relentless egg-eaters; the parents MUST be completely removed immediately after spawning. The microscopic fry require infusoria.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is lethal starvation; they are strict micro-predators and will categorically starve to death if forced onto an exclusively dry-flake diet. A constant supply of live or frozen food is strictly mandatory. The second major risk is severe stress and physiological collapse caused by keeping them in bright, sparsely decorated aquariums with strong currents; massive plant cover and stagnant water are strictly required. Finally, NEVER purchase artificially dyed (painted) specimens, as they suffer from compromised immune systems and die prematurely.

Fish profile

Temperament
Pacifico e gregario. Tenere in gruppi di 6–8+
Diet
Carnivoro micro-predatore: cibo vivo o surgelato obbligatorio — artemia, dafnia, chironomus. Rifiuta quasi sempre il cibo secco
Tank level
Zona intermedia
Minimum group
6
Adult size
4 cm
Minimum tank
40 L
GH
0 dGH - 14 dGH
KH
0 dKH - 7 dKH
TDS
n/a
Conductivity
n/a
Feeding frequency
2 volte al giorno
Bioload
Negligible
Flow
Corrente debole
Reproduction
Possibile ma avannotti molto difficili da allevare. Vasca dedicata piantumata. Uova adesive su vegetazione. Nessuna cura parentale. Avannotti necessitano di cibo vivo microscopico specifico (nauplii di Diaptomus).
Compatibility
Vasca monospecifica o con pesci piccoli e pacifici. Non acquistare mai esemplari tinti artificialmente.

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Representative live aquarium/natural image from Channa bleheri (same catalog section FISH) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Parambassis lala.

Exact live/aquarium image selected from Wikimedia Commons for Parambassis lala.