Search Species
Search for fish species by common or scientific name, or use filters to browse by water type, size, temperament, and difficulty.
Found 665 species

Emperor tetra
Nematobrycon palmeri
Emperor tetras are those classy little Colombian characins with the dark horizontal stripe and the males' awesome trident/lyretail look. Keep a decent-sized group and you'll see the males do their little posturing displays without really hurting each other, especially in a planted tank with some shade.

Endler's livebearer
Poecilia wingei
Endlers are basically tiny little firecrackers-males stay small but flash a ton of neon color and never stop cruising the tank. They're super social and active, and if you keep males and females together you'll have babies before you've even finished tweaking the aquascape.

Engkarit
Osteochilus partilineatus
Osteochilus partilineatus is a tiny little bony-lipped barb from West Kalimantan (Borneo) that lives in deep, blackwater forest streams with flowing water. Its small adult size is the cool part here - it is one of those "wait, that is an Osteochilus?" species - but it is not really a standard aquarium fish, so most of its care is best approached like a sensitive blackwater river/stream cyprinid.
Epulu alestid
Brachyalestes epuluensis
Brachyalestes epuluensis is a Congo Basin African tetra relative from the Epulu River system in DR Congo. It is a mid-sized, torpedo-shaped schooling fish (max about 11 cm standard length) that would act a lot like other African tetras in the tank - always cruising and looking for food. The tricky part is there is basically no aquarium-specific care info published for this exact species, so you keep it successfully by treating it like a small-to-medium riverine alestid and focusing on clean, well-oxygenated water and room to swim.

Eregli minnow
Garra kemali
Garra kemali is a tiny Turkish Garra that hangs close to the bottom and spends a lot of time grazing surfaces for edible bits. It comes from marshes and lakes rather than the typical fast riffles people associate with many other Garra, and its wild populations are considered endangered, so its story is more conservation-focused than aquarium-trade focused.

Estuarine triplefin
Forsterygion nigripenne
This little triplefin is a bottom-hugging, rock-darting fish from New Zealand estuaries - the kind that wedges itself into cover and then pops out to grab tiny critters. Males get extra interesting in breeding season with enlarged fin tips, and they guard eggs that are stuck down to the nesting site with sticky threads. It is not a typical tropical aquarium fish - think cool, temperate, and brackish-leaning conditions.

Eurasian Minnow (Common Minnow)
Phoxinus phoxinus
Phoxinus phoxinus is a small, fast-swimming minnow associated with cool, well-oxygenated waters. It is a gregarious shoaling fish; males intensify in colour during breeding. Note: the name P. phoxinus has historically been applied broadly across Eurasia, but the group is now treated as a species complex in which true P. phoxinus may be restricted to parts of Western Europe.

European gudgeon
Gobio gobio
The European gudgeon is a small bottom-dwelling cyprinid with a slender body, sandy-brown mottling, and distinct barbels at the corners of the mouth used to locate food in the substrate. It is an active schooling fish that prefers well-oxygenated water and a sand or fine-gravel bottom, often resting on the substrate between foraging bouts. Best kept in cool, river-style aquariums with moderate flow rather than warm tropical setups.

European mudminnow
Umbra krameri
Umbra krameri is a little swamp-and-ditch specialist from the Danube area that does the classic mudminnow thing: it can handle low-oxygen, weedy water and will happily pick at tiny critters all day. Its coolest party trick is that it is facultative air-breathing, and it has that subtle mottled, shadowy pattern that makes it vanish in plants until it suddenly darts out for food.

Evezard's loach
Indoreonectes evezardi
This small Indian brook/stone loach occurs in stream habitats in India (Western Ghats and Satpura range). The species includes cave-adapted forms (e.g., reported from Kotumsar Cave) that may show reduced pigmentation and regressed eyes.

Exquisite sand-goby
Favonigobius exquisitus
This little sand-goby is a bottom-hugger from Aussie estuaries that likes to hang out on sandy flats (sometimes right in seagrass). Its whole vibe is "blend in, perch, and pounce" - a neat goby if you are into naturalistic brackish setups and watching tiny ambush-predator behavior.

Eyespot pufferfish (Figure-8 puffer)
Dichotomyctere ocellatus
This is the little "figure-8" puffer with the yellow-green squiggles and the two bold eyespots near the tail-tons of personality in a small body. They're basically snail-hunting machines with a curious, interactive vibe, but they can be spicy with their own kind, so you plan the tank around that.
