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Tilapia

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A Nile tilapia, a type of fish, photographed at the Snake Park in central Nairobi.

Tilapia is the common name for many species of cichlid fish. These fish live in freshwater places like streams, ponds, rivers, and lakes in Africa and the Middle East. You can also find them in brackish water.

Historically, tilapia has been important for fishing communities in Africa. Today, it is also important in aquaculture and aquaponics, which are ways of farming fish.

In many places, tilapia is a popular and affordable food. In the Philippines, people have always liked to eat it. In the United States, tilapia has been one of the most eaten fish since 2002 because it is cheap and easy to cook. People often fry or broil tilapia to make tasty dishes.

Sometimes, tilapia can become an invasive species in new warm places, like in Australia, if it is brought there on purpose or by accident. But it usually does not survive in colder areas.

Etymology

The name "tilapia" comes from an old group of fish called Tilapia. The name may have come from a Tswana language word meaning 'fish' or from Greek words. A scientist named Andrew Smith gave this name to the fish group in 1840.

History

The farming of Nile tilapia started in Ancient Egypt. It was shown by a special symbol in their writing.

The Tomb of Nakht, from 1500 BC, contains a tilapia hieroglyph just above and to the right of the head of the central tall figure.

In Egyptian culture, tilapia meant new life and was linked to Hathor, the goddess of growth and plenty. People thought the tilapia traveled with the sun god each day as he moved across the sky.

Tilapia was one of the main fishes caught long ago in the Sea of Galilee. It is sometimes called "St. Peter's fish" because of a story in the Gospel of Matthew where the apostle Peter caught a fish that had a coin in its mouth. Many kinds of tilapia live in the Sea of Galilee, where people have been catching them for many years.

Characteristics

Tilapia usually have flat, deep bodies. They have special bones in their throats that help them eat different kinds of food. This makes it easy for them to catch and chew what they find.

Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus)

Their mouths can stretch out, and they have cone-shaped teeth. Tilapia usually have a long back fin and a line along their sides. Some Nile tilapia can grow up to 60 centimetres, which is about 2 feet long.

Besides needing the right temperature, tilapia can live in many different places. For example, in the Salton Sea, tilapia were placed there when the water was only a little salty, but now they live where the salt is so strong that other sea fish cannot survive.

Tilapia are also known for carrying their eggs and tiny babies in their mouths for several days after the babies’ yolk sacs disappear.

Species

All tilapia used to be called Tilapia. Now, scientists put many types into new groups, like Oreochromis and Sarotherodon. The most important types for farming are in these new groups.

Red nile tilapia under experimentation in CLSU, Philippines

Tilapia can help control some water plants and tiny creatures. In Kenya, they were added to water to eat mosquito babies, which helps stop the spread of malaria. But tilapia can sometimes cause problems when they go to new places where they don’t belong. They need warm water to survive, so they usually don’t live in colder areas. In warm places, they can grow quickly and change nature’s balance.

Some smaller tilapia are popular in aquariums because of their colorful patterns. Larger types are often raised for food because they grow fast and can live in crowded, not-so-clean water.

Tilapia are easy to farm because they eat plants and algae. This saves money and helps the environment. They grow quickly and are a good source of protein. Many countries farm tilapia, especially in warm places. Farmers often make sure their tilapia are all males because male fish grow faster and help keep the population under control.

Principal commercial tilapia species
Common nameScientific namemax.
length
Common
length
max.
weight
max.
age
Trophic
level
IUCN status
Nile tilapiaOreochromis niloticus (Linnaeus, 1758)60 cmcm4.324 kg9 years2.0NT IUCN 3 1.svg Least Concern
Blue tilapiaOreochromis aureus (Steindachner, 1864)45.7 cm16 cm2.010 kgyears2.1NT IUCN 3 1.svg Least Concern
Nile tilapia + blue tilapia hybridcmcmkgyears
Mozambique tilapiaOreochromis mossambicus (Peters, 1852)39 cm35 cm1.130 kg11 years2.0NT IUCN 3 1.svg Vulnerable

As food

Escabeche fresh tilapia

Tilapia has been an important food for a very long time. Ancient art from around 1350 BCE in Egypt shows how important this fish was. One type, called Nile tilapia, comes from that area and was raised in special ponds along the Nile River.

Tilapia was brought to Tamil Nadu, India, in the 1950s to provide affordable protein. It spread quickly because it can live in dirty water with low oxygen. Scientists have suggested growing tilapia in certain parts of India, like the western slopes of the Western Ghats and areas along the coast between Cape Comorin and south of river Tapti, including districts like Tinnevelly, Madurai, and Ramnad in Madras south of river Vaigai.

Tilapia is often made into fillets without skin or bones. Sometimes, it can taste unpleasant because of natural substances in the water, but this does not mean the fish isn’t fresh or safe to eat. Tilapia has very little mercury and is low in fat, calories, and sodium. It is a good source of protein and contains important nutrients like phosphorus, niacin, selenium, vitamin B12, and potassium. However, it may not be as nutritious as some other fish because it has less of a certain healthy fat called omega-3 and more of another kind called omega-6. Researchers are studying ways to improve tilapia’s nutrition by changing its diet.

Ecological agent

Tilapia are helpful because they eat floating plants, like duckweed and watermeal, as well as many underwater plants and types of algae. In places like the United States and Thailand, people use tilapia to control unwanted plants instead of using harmful chemicals.

In Kenya, tilapia help by eating things that carry malaria parasites, which can make people sick. They can also be raised together with shrimp, which helps both grow better.

Medical use

In Brazil, scientists tested using the skin from a type of tilapia fish called Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) as a bandage to help heal burns. They first tried it on rats, and it worked well. Then they tried it on people with burns in 2017. In the United States, tilapia skin has helped heal serious burns on the paws of black bears affected by wildfires. Tests show that tilapia skin can help burns heal faster and cost less than other treatments.

Tilapia skin is also used in surgeries to help rebuild skin. This is possible because tilapia skin contains a special protein called type I collagen that is similar to human skin. Before using it, the skin is cleaned and treated to make it safe.

Parasites

Tilapia, like many fish, can carry different kinds of parasites. Some of these parasites, called monogeneans, live on the gills of tilapia and include species from the genus Cichlidogyrus. Others, like species of Enterogyrus, live inside the digestive system. Because tilapia are often farmed for food, they have been moved around the world. Sometimes, they bring their parasites with them. In South China, a study in 2019 found nine types of these parasites on introduced tilapia.

Images

Chart showing how much tilapia has been caught and farmed around the world from 1950 to 2010.
Illustration of a blue walleye fish, showing its distinctive features for educational purposes.
Chart showing how much wild tilapia was caught around the world from 1950 to 2010.
Chart showing how much tilapia has been farmed around the world from 1950 to 2010.
A delicious plate of blackened tilapia seasoned with Cajun spices, served with lemon and lime juice.
A delicious plate of air-fried tilapia, ready to enjoy!

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Tilapia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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