Astatotilapia flaviijosephi
Astatotilapia flaviijosephi, the Jordan mouthbrooder, is a vulnerable species of freshwater fish in the family Cichlidae. It is found in the central Jordan River system, including Lake Tiberias, in Israel, Jordan and Syria, making it the only haplochromine cichlid to naturally range outside of Africa. This species is too small to be of significant importance to fisheries, unlike the only other cichlids native to the Levant, the economically important tilapias.
The specific name flaviijosephi refers to the historian Titus Flavius Josephus.
Habitat and conservation status
The natural habitats of A. flaviijosephi are streams, springs, canals, pools and shallow waters in lakes, especially in areas with stones or aquatic vegetation. The various subpopulations are isolated from each other, with some being lacustrine and others essentially riverine. The water temperature in its range vary quite significantly with season, at least from, but aquarium studies have shown that A. flaviijosephi are almost completely inactive at the lowermost range.A. flaviijosephi is threatened by habitat loss caused by drought, water extraction and pollution. It may also be threatened by introduced species, although they do not appear to have affected the Lake Tiberias population.
Appearance
A. flaviijosephi is the smallest cichlid native to its range. It reaches up to in total length, but most adults are about. Males grow larger than females.Like many other cichlids, its colour pattern varies with sex, age and mood; some of these colour changes can occur quite rapidly. The standard pattern is overall silvery–greyish to silvery–tan with a vertical dark or pale line below the eye. Males have a few relatively large yellow "egg–spots" on the anal fin and a few dotty orangish lines along the side of the body. When afraid they get about ten dark grey vertical bars on their body and when breeding two horizontal stripes. The latter pattern is stronger in courting males when most markings and colours become much more intense and contrasting, with blue–black underparts and a bright blue chin. Nursing females are also more contrastingly patterned than the standard breeding season pattern, but much less intense than the courting males.