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Alestidae

African tetras (family Alestidae, formerly spelled Alestiidae) are a group of characiform fish found exclusively in Africa. This family contains about 18 genera and 119 species. Among the best known members are the Congo tetra and African tigerfish; both are kept in aquaria, and tigerfish are utilized for food and as gamefish.

Although currently native only to African waterways, fossil evidence suggests that during the Paleogene, they ranged as far north as southern Europe and as far east as the Arabian subcontinent. Fossil remains date back to potentially the Late Paleocene with Hydrocynus remains known from Algeria. Alestid-like teeth are also known from the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of France, and phylogenetic evidence also suggests that they diverged around this time.

Taxonomy

Taxonomy based on Van der Laan 2017 and Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes (2026):

The following fossil genera are also known:

  • Genus †Alestoides <small>Monod & Gaudant, 1998</small> (Early Eocene of France)
  • Genus †Arabocharax <small>Micklich & Roscher, 1990</small> (Oligocene of Saudi Arabia)
  • Genus †Bunocharax <small>Van Neer, 1994</small> (Miocene of Africa)
  • Genus †Eurocharax <small>Gaudant, 1980</small> (?Oligocene of France)
  • Genus ?†Mahengecharax <small>Murray, 2003</small> (Middle Eocene of Tanzania, taxonomic identity disputed)
  • Genus †Sindacharax <small>Greenwood & Howes, 1975</small> (Miocene of Africa)

The Lepidarchidae, whose two genera were previously placed in this family, have been found to be an ancient group more closely related to the Hepsetidae, and are thus placed in their own family now.

Below are two cladograms: the left one is based on a maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree from a 2023 analysis of ultraconserved element (UCE) loci, while the right one is based on 2026 study's maximum likelihood tree analyzing UCEs with ultrafast bootstrap support:

References