Sakura Mosaic Leopard Discus (Symphysodon aequifasciatus)
Sakura Mosaic Leopard Discus — Symphysodon aequifasciatus
Living artwork of the Amazon
The Sakura Mosaic Leopard Discus is where fishkeeping meets fine art. This selectively bred variety combines dense leopard spotting with intricate mosaic patterning over a soft pink to red base, creating a layered design that looks painted rather than grown. Under proper lighting the colors shift between rose, crimson, and pearlescent white, while delicate blue tracings appear across the fins and face.
Native discus originate from calm Amazon floodplains, and this lineage still carries that elegance. They move slowly and deliberately, hovering as a group before gliding forward in perfect synchronization. A mature school doesn’t behave like individual fish — it feels like a single organism changing direction together.
Reaching 6–8 inches, they require stable, clean water and calm tank mates. Best kept in groups, they establish gentle hierarchy without chaos and pair well with peaceful species such as tetras, small catfish, and eartheaters. When comfortable they become highly aware of their keeper, often gathering at the front glass at feeding time.
Mature pairs may form and carefully guard eggs and fry, showing attentive parental care that adds another layer of fascination beyond their appearance.

Description
Sakura Mosaic Leopard Discus — Symphysodon aequifasciatus
Living artwork of the Amazon
The Sakura Mosaic Leopard Discus is where fishkeeping meets fine art. This selectively bred variety combines dense leopard spotting with intricate mosaic patterning over a soft pink to red base, creating a layered design that looks painted rather than grown. Under proper lighting the colors shift between rose, crimson, and pearlescent white, while delicate blue tracings appear across the fins and face.
Native discus originate from calm Amazon floodplains, and this lineage still carries that elegance. They move slowly and deliberately, hovering as a group before gliding forward in perfect synchronization. A mature school doesn’t behave like individual fish — it feels like a single organism changing direction together.
Reaching 6–8 inches, they require stable, clean water and calm tank mates. Best kept in groups, they establish gentle hierarchy without chaos and pair well with peaceful species such as tetras, small catfish, and eartheaters. When comfortable they become highly aware of their keeper, often gathering at the front glass at feeding time.
Mature pairs may form and carefully guard eggs and fry, showing attentive parental care that adds another layer of fascination beyond their appearance.



















