Chinese rice fish
The Chinese rice fish is a species of fish in the genus Oryzias. This freshwater fish occurs in swamps, stagnant parts of streams, rice fields and marshes, and is up to long. It was formerly considered a subspecies of the Japanese rice fish. The natural range of the Chinese rice fish is in East and Southeast Asia, including the Yangtze, Mekong, Irrawaddy, Salween, Red River and Nanpangjiang basins. It has been introduced to Kazakhstan and Russia ; also spreading in the Azov basin and has been discovered in the Obytichna River in Ukraine.
Ecological niche
Chinese Rice Fish have been utilized in China and Asia for hundreds of years for rice farming. This process allows the fish to provide protein to the rice, enhancing the food. It is proven that in the presence of rice fish, rice fields grow better, and the rice yield is increased by approximately 4–15%.Diet consists of both plants and animals. These omnivores consume plants, microscopic organisms including zooplankton and algae, and parts of insects. This introduces another biological role Chinese Rice fish play, controlling the pest population within the rice fields. The ideal environment for Chinese Rice Fish are inland freshwater and wetlands areas of shallow, slow moving water sources, especially those close to shorelines that contain vegetative cover. Rice paddies, ponds, and farming channels tend to harbor these ideal environments. When water temperatures cool, Chinese Rice Fish exhibit behaviors of hibernation. While there has not been much research conducted on the role of Chinese Rice Fish in the food web, they are primarily preyed on by dragonfly larvae, other fish, and birds. Most live for roughly one year in the wild, while in captivity, they can live for four years or more.