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FishFreshwaterDifficult

Curated catalog

Sabrefin killifish

Terranatos dolichopterus

An annual killifish from Venezuela with elongated sabre-like dorsal and anal fins in males — a dramatic display for a fish of barely 3 cm. Native to temporary pools of the Orinoco basin. Advanced annual species: eggs must undergo diapause in peat for months before rehydration. Shy and territorial. Requires live food — almost always refuses dry. Species-only tank with peat substrate for spawning. Lid mandatory: jumper. For experienced killifish breeders.

Family
Rivulidae
Origin
Venezuela
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

21 °C - 26 °C

pH

6 - 6.5

Water type

Freshwater

Tank level

Zona intermedia e inferiore

Adult size

4 cm

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

Endemic exclusively to the vast Orinoco River basin, specifically restricted to the intensely hot, isolated savannas (Llanos) of Venezuela. Terranatos dolichopterus (the Sabretooth Killifish) represents the absolute extreme of evolutionary adaptation. It naturally colonizes shallow, temporary, sun-baked mud pools, deeply flooded grassy plains, and isolated ditches that form strictly during the rainy season. These micro-habitats are devoid of water movement, intensely warm, heavily sunlit, and fundamentally ephemeral—completely drying out to baked mud during the dry season.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Rivulidae family, it is the sole, monotypic species in the Terranatos genus. Taxonomically, "Terranatos" translates dramatically from Latin as "born from the earth," perfectly describing the sudden emergence of fry from parched dirt when the rains arrive. "Dolichopterus" means "long-finned." Morphologically, males represent a breathtaking spectacle: possessing a sleek, cylindrical body dominated by outrageously elongated, flowing, sabre-like dorsal and anal fins that can extend past the tail itself.

Social Behavior:

They are strictly annual, highly active, and fiercely territorial micro-predators. Because their entire lifespan is biologically limited to 6-9 months before their habitat evaporates, they live in a state of absolute, frantic urgency. Males are intensely, violently aggressive towards each other, constantly engaging in spectacular, flared-fin battles to secure the best spawning mud and monopolize females. They MUST be kept in a strict, carefully managed harem (1 male to 3 or 4 females) to disperse male aggression.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is absolute, extreme, and spectacular. Females are small, possess entirely normal, short, transparent fins, and exhibit a heavily camouflaged, mottled pale-brown or sandy coloration. Males are the undisputed kings of the annual killifish world. The male's body blazes with an intensely dark, velvety burgundy, purplish, or jet-black base, heavily speckled with iridescent neon-blue dots. The defining feature is their massive, trailing, sabre-like fins, which are banded in vivid black and white.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture must meticulously replicate a shallow, temporary Venezuelan mud pool. A dedicated species tank (minimum 40 liters for a trio) is absolutely mandatory; they are not community fish. The absolute, non-negotiable requirement is the substrate: a deep (3-5 cm) layer of pure, boiled peat moss (coir) covering the entire bottom. The tank MUST have dim lighting (using floating plants) and zero water flow. A tight-fitting lid is essential as they are powerful, frantic jumpers.

Diet & Feeding:

In their temporary pools, they are apex micro-predators with ravenous appetites and accelerated metabolisms, feeding exclusively on massive swarms of aquatic insects and mosquito larvae. In captivity, they are obligate carnivores that will virtually always refuse dry flakes or commercial pellets. To fuel their massive fin growth and frantic breeding pace, their diet MUST be heavily, often exclusively, based on high-quality live foods: massive daily feedings of live daphnia, mosquito larvae, bloodworms, and tubifex worms.

Water Quality:

Originating from isolated savanna pools, they are absolute specialists. They demand very warm tropical temperatures (24-28°C / 75-82°F) and strictly require very soft, highly acidic water (pH 5.5 - 6.5) heavily saturated with humic acids released by their peat substrate. Because they inhabit totally stagnant, temporary pools, the aquarium MUST NOT have power filters or powerheads. Gentle filtration via a tiny, matured sponge filter set to a mere trickle is the only acceptable method.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is virtually zero. Because they are highly aggressive, intensely fragile, require completely stagnant water, and have a frantic, 8-month lifespan, Terranatos dolichopterus MUST be kept in a strict, dedicated species-only breeding setup. They cannot compete for food with normal aquarium fish, and their massive, trailing fins will instantly be shredded to the bone by any other species (even Tetras). Do not mix them with any other fish.

Aquarium Breeding:

This is the sole purpose of keeping them; breeding is an absolute necessity to maintain the species, as the adults will die within months. They are annual peat-divers. The male drives the female to the bottom, where they literally plunge entirely into the deep peat substrate to bury heavily encased, drought-resistant eggs. After several weeks, the aquarist MUST remove the peat, squeeze it damp-dry, seal it in a dark plastic bag, and incubate it for exactly 4 to 6 months before re-wetting it to trigger explosive hatching.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is their biological clock; aquarists must understand these fish will die of old age in under a year, regardless of care. The second major risk is failure to properly harvest, dry, and incubate the peat substrate, resulting in the loss of the genetic line. Medically, their massive, trailing fins are highly prone to velvet (Oodinium) and severe bacterial rot if the water quality deteriorates or if the peat becomes fouled with uneaten live food.

Fish profile

Temperament
Timido e territoriale. Maschi aggressivi tra loro. Vasca monospecifica
Diet
Carnivoro: cibo vivo obbligatorio — nauplii di artemia, tubifex, piccoli invertebrati acquatici. Rifiuta il cibo secco
Tank level
Zona intermedia e inferiore
Minimum group
2
Adult size
4 cm
Minimum tank
30 L
GH
0 dGH - 7 dGH
KH
n/a
TDS
n/a
Conductivity
n/a
Feeding frequency
2 volte al giorno
Bioload
Negligible
Flow
Corrente debole
Jump risk
Covered tank required
Reproduction
Specie ANNUALE avanzata. Deposizione nella torba. Raccogliere torba con uova, strizzare, conservare umida per mesi (diapausa). Reidratare con acqua morbida per schiusa. Avannotti: infusori, poi nauplii di artemia.
Compatibility
Vasca monospecifica obbligatoria.

Image gallery

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

Representative live aquarium/natural image from Hasemania nana (same catalog section FISH) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Terranatos dolichopterus.