Jack Dempsey
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Actinopterygii
Order:Perciformes
Family:Cichlidae
Genus:Cichlasoma
Species:octofasciatum
Binomial name
Cichlasoma octofasciatum

The Jack Dempsey (Cichlasoma octofasciatum) is a cichlid fish.

The Jack Dempsey is a popular aquarium fish, though it is not easy to keep because like many cichlids it can be highly aggressive (its name is taken from the boxer Jack Dempsey).

The fish is native to Yucatan and Central America, where it is found in slow-moving waters, such as swampy areas with warm, murky water, weedy, mud- and sand-bottomed canals, and drainage ditches. It is also established as an introduced species in Australia, the USA and Thailand (presumably as an aquarium escape). It can reach up to 25cm in length, and has an iridescent greenish colour. It is carnivorous, eating worms, crustaceans, insects and other fish.

Jack Dempseys lay their eggs on the substrate (the bottom of the aquarium or pool). Like most cichlids, they show substantial parental care: both parents help incubate the eggs and guard the fry when they hatch.

In 1997 the San Francisco Chronicle reported that a man had died when he put a Jack Dempsey into his mouth as a joke: the fish presumably erected its fin spines to avoid being swallowed, a characteristic cichlid anti-predator response, and became wedged in the man's throat.

External links

Reference

  • Barlow, G. W. (2000). The Cichlid fishes. Cambridge MA: Perseus. Pp 12/13 recount the choking story.