The piranhas or pirañas are a group of carnivorous freshwater fish living in South American rivers. They belong to five genera of the subfamily of Serrasalminae (which also includes closely related herbivorous fish including pacus and silver dollars). They are normally about 15 to 25 cm long (6 to 10 inches), although reportedly individuals have been found up to 40 cm in length. They are known for their sharp teeth (able to bite through a steel fishing hook) and an aggressive appetite for meat and flesh. They are normally only found in the Amazonian, Guianas and Paraguayan river systems. However, piranha (most likely former aquarium-dwellers) are also occasionally found in the Potomac River, but they typically do not survive the cold winters of that region.*
Recent research on Serrasalmus aff. brandtii and Pygocentrus nattereri in Viana Lake, which is formed during the wet season when the Rio Pindare (a left bank tributary of the Rio Mearim) floods, has shown that these species eat vegetable matter at some stages in their life history. They are not strictly carnivorous fishes.
They are a popular food fish also, though if a specimen is caught on hook and line it may be attacked by other piranhas.
The name piranha may come from a hybrid language composed of Tupi-Guarani languages; it may be a compound word made of the components 'pirá', meaning 'fish', and 'sanha' or 'ranha', meaning 'tooth'. In Tupi, inalienably possessed nouns take the prefix 't-', 's-', or 'r-' depending on the possessor, or zero in combination; thus 'pirá'+'anha'. Alternately, it may come from Tupi 'pirá' ('fish') and 'ánha' ('cut'). It is pronounced (in IPA) (or ), , or ).
In the Maroni River in Suriname/French Guiana a large kind, weighing up to five kilograms, can be found; it seems to be an herbivore. This species hosts colonies of worms in its stomach.
Alleged danger to humans
Piranhas generally pose no threat to humans. Natives frequently swim in piranha-infested water without attacks or scratches. However, it is not recommended to swim where piranha live in drought season because of increased aggressiveness caused by food scarcity and increased tendency to form large schools. Piranha fish also have the same sensory system that enables sharks to detect blood in minuscule amounts, so it is believed that swimming with an open cut may enhance the chance of an attack, yet Piranha fish rarely try to eat animals much larger than them.
Six genera of piranhas
- Pygocentrus (True Piranhas)
- Pygocentrus cariba (Shoulder Spot Piranha)
- Cariba Piranha
- Cariba
- Caribe
- Black Shoulder Piranha
- Orinoco Piranha
- Black Eared Piranha
- Venezuelan Red Belly Piranha
- Pygocentrus nattereri
- Red Bellied Piranha (pictured below)
- Redbelly Piranha
- Red
- Red Breasted Piranha
- Red Piranha, Piranha
- Common Piranha
- Pygocentrus nattereri 'Ternetzi'
- Ternetzi Piranha
- Yellow King Emperor Piranha
- Gold Dust Piranha
- Yellow Nattereri
- Golden Redbellied Piranha
- Yellow Redbellied Piranha
- Serrasalmus (Pirambebas)
- Pristobrycon
- Pygopristis
- Pygopristis denticulata
- Five-Cusped Piranha
- Denticulata Piranha
- Big-Toothed Piranha
- Gold Piranha
- "Caribe Palometa"
- "Caribito"
- Catoprion
- Citharinus
Other, closely related species:
Image:Pyranha_Pygocentrus_piraya_group_1280.jpg|Pygocentrus nattereri
Image:Pyranha_Pygocentrus_piraya_1280.jpg|Pygocentrus nattereri
Image:Piranha-serrasalmus_manueli_01.jpg|Serrasalmus manueli
References
- Frank Magallanes URL: Oregon Piranha Exotic Fish Exhibit
- FishBase as of 2004-03-24
- Eric J. Lyman: Piranha meat could take a bite out of what ails you, Houston Chronicle, July 17, 1998
- "Characidae." ITIS Standard Report. (Integrated Taxonomic Information System: National Museum of Natural History, Washington, D.C., 2004-10-13). URL: ITIS 162848
- Fahrenthold, David A.: In River of Many Aliens, Snakehead Looms as Threat, The Washington Post, May 29, 2005.
- "Family Characidae - Characins." FishBase. ed. Froese, R. and D. Pauly (08/2004), URL: Characidae
External links
Characidae |
Wildlife of South America |
Piranhas |
Piraña |
Piranha |
Piranha |
Piranha |
פיראנה |
Piranijos |
Piranha's |
ピラニア |
Pirayaer |
Pirania |
Piranha |
Piraijat |
Piraya