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Text and photos by
Nick Baker, unless otherwise stated

 EcologyAsia 2010
Copyright ©

 
 
   

 

 
   
Asian Swamp Eel
   



Specimen found in a shallow stream issuing from a small swamp at Bukit Brown, Singapore.

Family : SYNBRANCHIDAE
Species : Monopterus albus
Maximum Length : 100 cm

References : F1

The Asian Swamp Eel can be found in various aquatic habitats including rivers, lakes, ponds, rice paddies, marshes, swamps and drains. It is tolerant of  polluted water or low oxygen levels, and can breathe air efficiently enough to allow migration across short distances of dry land. They are mainly nocturnal, emerging to feed on fishes, crustaceans and other invertebrates.

Though swamp eels appear similar in shape to true eels they are in fact unrelated : swamp eels lack scales, have greatly reduced fins, and have a single v-shaped gill-opening beneath the throat rather than twin lateral gill-openings as in other fishes.  The Asian Swamp Eel is rounded in cross-section, has  a distinctive blunt snout and a tapered tail. Colour is variable, but generally comprises a greenish-grey or brown background speckled with pale-coloured spots or flecks.

 
 

 

Their eggs are laid in bubble-nests in shallow water. Fry and juveniles are all female, but with the onset of adulthood some females will develop into males.

This edible species occurs in India, China and Japan and throughout Southeast Asia.