pics from the internet
On MFK, Johnptc's black pacu
RED BELLY PACU OR BLACK PACU?
Red bellies have a more rhomboid shape. Red bellies have a more rounded head. They also have smaller adipose fins that lack rays. The adipose fin will probably look like an extension of fish skin. The fin flops around from side to side depending on which way the tail is moving and the body is moving. Black pacu have adipose fins that are supported by bony spines known as rays. So if the pacu has an adipose fin that he can move around like his dorsal fin, it is probably a black pacu. The opercula is short on the red bellies as compared with the larger semi-lunate shaped opercula on the blacks.
https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/factsheet.aspx?SpeciesID=427
Here are some pictures of black pacu:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dave_irving/3749678082/
https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/FactSheet.aspx?speciesID=418
http://www.seriouslyfish.com/species/colossoma-macropomum/
There is a lot of confusion about pacu. Even scientific names are confusing. Red belly pacus are the most common. They used to be called Colossoma bidens. The classification is now Piaractus brachypomum in all current literature. Another name is pirapitinga. They can get up to 3 feet in length and weigh up to 55 pounds. Juvenile red belly pacus usually have red chest and bellies. The red color usually fades, and adults resemble black pacu in coloration.
Red bellies have a second row of molars in their upper jaw, and blacks only have one row…but how many of us are going to be checking out their teeth…
Blacks have an oval shape, while red bellies are rhomboidal in shape.
http://www.acuteangling.com/.../tambaqui-pirapitinga.html
Black pacu are far less common. Their scientific name is Colossoma macropomum. They are also called Tambaqui. One article I read said they can get 3 ½ feet and weigh 97 pounds. It gets extremely confusing when searching the internet on this subject, because some of the authors themselves get mixed up and post pictures of adult red belly pacu, when writing about black pacu. The similar coloration of adult red belly pacus throws even the authors off.
Albino pacus are also Piaractus brachypomum, so are albino red bellies. I suspect the silver ones are just crosses of albino and regular run of the mill red belly. I seriously doubt that they are breeding a new type of pacu. The silver ones have the same morphology (rhomboidal shape) as all Piaractus brachypomum.
I was ignorant enough to think that I had black pacu because they were very dark. I was wrong
They are very interactive fish and very curious about the world inside and outside of their tank.