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

Stripefin ronquil
Rathbunella hypoplecta
This is a little bottom-hugging California coast fish that hangs around rocky and sandy spots and spends a lot of time tucked into structure. It eats small invertebrates and the male actually guards the eggs, which is pretty cool if you are into fish with real parenting behavior.

Sumatra barb (Tiger barb)
Puntigrus tetrazona
Tiger barbs are little chaos nuggets in the best way-super active, always zipping around, and they look awesome with those four bold black bars and orange fins. The big trick is keeping them in a proper-sized group so they roughhouse with each other instead of shredding a slow, long-finned tank mate's fins.
Sunda viviparous brotula
Ungusurculus sundaensis
This is a tiny little reef-dwelling brotula that lives tucked into cracks and crevices in very shallow water. The wild thing about these guys is they are livebearers (viviparous), which is pretty unusual among marine fishes, and they tend to be super cryptic and solitary.

Sundolyra catfish
Sundolyra latebrosa
This is a super obscure little bagrid catfish from northwestern Sumatra, and its whole vibe is "hidden" - the species name latebrosa literally points at how cryptic and rarely seen it is. In the wild it is known from a very limited drainage, and in the hobby it is basically unicorn-level rare, so most "care" advice you see online is going to be educated guesswork rather than proven aquarium experience.

Super Orange Aequidens
Aequidens superomaculatum
This is a small South American Aequidens from the upper Orinoco and Rio Negro area, and it stays way more compact than the big bruiser acaras people usually think of. The cool bit is that it has some really interesting breeding behavior reported in captivity - it will spawn on a surface, then move the wrigglers into the mouth for care, which is just wild to watch if you ever get a pair going.

Tachira rubbernose pleco
Chaetostoma tachiraense
This is a small mountain Chaetostoma from the Catatumbo (Lake Maracaibo) drainage, the kind of fish that wants to be plastered to rocks in high-oxygen water. It stays around 3.4 inches SL, spends its time grazing biofilm, and does best when you treat it more like a river fish than a typical warm, lazy pleco.
Talas stone loach
Triplophysa paradoxa
Triplophysa paradoxa is a little bottom-dwelling stone loach from the Talas River basin, built for life hugging the substrate in cooler, well-oxygenated water. In a tank it spends most of its time scooting around the bottom, wedging into crevices, and generally acting like a tiny river-goblin that wants lots of cover and clean water.

Tallapoosa darter
Etheostoma tallapoosae
This is a little Alabama-Georgia endemic darter that lives right where current starts to pick up - clean riffles and runs with gravel, cobble, and bigger rock. In a tank it acts like a tiny bottom-hugging stream perch, perching on stones and scooting between cover, and it really rewards you if you build a cool high-oxygen "river" setup.

Tanaka's possum wrasse
Wetmorella tanakai
This is one of those tiny, sneaky reef wrasses that basically lives in the rockwork and pops out to hunt little micro-bugs all day. The red-orange body with thin white bars and those little "eye spots" on the fins make it a really cool "where did that fish come from?" kind of addition. It is super peaceful, but it does best in a mature reef where it can graze and not get pushed around.

Tanganyika lampeye
Lacustricola pumilus
This is a tiny Lake Tanganyika-area lampeye killifish that hangs in little groups along quiet shorelines and river-mouth shallows. When the light hits right, the males flash a really slick metallic eye and warm orange tones in the fins, and they are constantly out in the open cruising the edges for food.

Taquari banjo catfish
Ernstichthys taquari
This is a tiny little banjo catfish from Brazil that lives right on the bottom and blends in with rocks, sand, and leaf litter. Its known habitat is shaded, vegetated stretches of a small whitewater river with moderate flow and lots of big rocks - very much a hide-and-sit-still kind of fish. In the aquarium hobby its basically a "research fish" right now: super cool, but there is almost no species-specific care data published.

Tchefou cardinalfish
Jaydia tchefouensis
Jaydia tchefouensis is a little marine cardinalfish (Apogonidae) originally described from Chefoo/Tche-Fou (modern Yantai), China. Real talk: this name is kind of messy in the literature and may actually be a junior synonym of Jaydia lineata, so you will almost never see it sold under this exact ID in the aquarium trade. Like other cardinalfish, expect a shy, nocturnal vibe that hangs near structure and picks off small meaty foods.
