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Deltad
04-15-2011, 11:08 AM
Article taken from here (http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/content.php?sid=3834&utm_source=PFK_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=April_15_2011&utm_term=The_10_worst_man_made_fish&utm_content=html).
I'm quite surprised at how many of these were genetically altered. For example, I didn't know the bubble eye goldfish, long fin tetra, and flowerhorn. I would never buy them in the first place, but it's good to know; now I have a reason not to.

I stand strong when it comes to "glowing" fish, like the zebra danios, and I discourage others to not fall into the hype of owning them, as well.

Cheers


http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4c2c637653ebe.jpg (http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/large/4c2c637653ebe.jpg) Copyright © JY Lin Co Ltd
With so many amazing fish to choose from, why try and create our own? But unfortunately there are plenty of man made fish out there. Here's our top ten of some of the worst.
Glow in the dark fish
We're all up for science having genuine benefits to health, but put it in the wrong hands and useful gene technology can quickly become the next cosmetic money maker.

http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4c2c6378706af.jpg

Introducing the glow in the dark Angelfish and Convict cichlids (http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/content.php?sid=2962) (pictured above), hot off the backs of the fluorescent Zebra danios and ricefish, called Glofish, which glow under black light.
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4da8134466717.jpg
Bubble eye goldfish
One of the worst fish on this list is also one of the most long standing – the Bubble eye. Those huge fluid filled sacks affect swimming ability most of all, but also eyesight, and are a risk to the fish's health if they get caught, torn or popped and then become infected.
Add large bubbles to a missing dorsal fin, large, twin tail and centuries of line breeding, weakening the fish, and you get a very unlucky goldfish.


http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4da81734cfd04.jpg

Parrot cichlid
OK, so the Parrot cichlid (http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/content.php?sid=2852) is a hybrid of at least two species – the Severum and Midas cichlid – only they have then been selected for the balloon, short bodied form and have deformed mouths. Then add on injection of dyes, tattooing (pictured above) and even tail docking to form "heart parrots" and you have another victim of man's strange, cruel ways.


http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4da812522d3f4.jpg

Long fin serpae tetra
What's the definition of irony? A fin-nipping fish that nips its own fins perhaps? Long finned fish are long established and very popular, like male guppies and Siamese fighters for example, but they don't nip fins. Line breed a known fin-nipping species like the Serpae tetra to have long fins and when you keep a group of them – like you should with all tetras – they bite each other's fins!


http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4da81253f35ca.jpg

Long fin Koi
Tell a proper Koi keeper that you like long finned Koi carp and he or she will look at you like you have just insulted their own mother! To the purists the long finned Koi is an abomination and we have to say we are inclined to agree. All that size, power, grace and elegance while swimming reduced to an awkward waddle. Picture by Molly Stevens, Creative Commons.


http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4ce551f71e4fd.jpg

Two headed arowana
Are these siamese twins man made? We would argue that they are, as they were produced in an arowana farm, albeit as a freak occurence in a spawning. Instead of being spat out in the normal way by the parent though, which in the wild would mean deformed fry spiraling down to the river bottom where they would be eaten, this two headed arowana (http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/content.php?sid=3381) was hand stripped, and artificially reared.
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4da8119c3b7af.jpg

Flowerhorn
Another poor victim of cross breeding for cosmetic and financial gain, the hybrid Flowerhorn cichlid originated from crossing the Trimac cichlid with a whole host of other Central American cichlid species and seeing what came out. Some were more colourful versions of Trimacs with better patterning but still all the attitude, while others developed larger nuchal humps.
About a decade on those humps are getting seriously large – too large – and short bodied fish are also being favoured (which are missing vertebrae), but the unluckiest of all get their tails chopped off with no anaesthetic! The Chinese call them lucky but a modern Flowerhorn maybe anything but. Picture by Lerdsuwa, Creative Commons.
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4da817331dc61.jpg

Parrothorn
And what do you get when you cross a Flowerhorn with a parrot cichlid? A Parrothorn of course! Some say that Flowerhorns and Parrot cichlids are sterile, so the origins of this fish are not quite known. They could in theory have just produced this Parrot cichlid-looking fish with the Flowerhorn pattern just by selecting successive generations of deformed Flowerhorns, but either way, of interest to the minority of fishkeepers but horrific to most of those who appreciate cichlids in their natural form.
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4d02244ed118f.jpg

Balloon fish
The breeding of shortened bodies in ornamental fish is actually quite common. Fancy goldfish were first of course, though some seem less shocking because they have always been that way throughout living memory. But take a tropical fish that we like and appreciate in its natural form like the Ram or this Pearl gourami for example and it looks pretty shocking. Balloon fish (http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/content.php?sid=3436) are missing vertebrae so are at a skeletal disadvantage when compared to their more able-bodied tank mates.


http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/custom/images/medium/4da81250c8ecc.jpg

Dyed glass fish
One of the first artificial tropical fish to cause genuine outcry in the aquatic community, and one that PFK launched its well known anti dyed fish campaign off the back of. Glass fish were the first victims of being injected with dye via a needle, but since then we have seen Corydoras, loaches and Black widow tetras, let alone the poor old Parrot cichlid once again.
PFK investigated this practice while in Singapore in 2007 and no matter what dodgy retailers may tell you, every one of those poor fish has been handled, and injected with dye, some with two colours.
What's more, the Glassfish isn't a hardy aquarium fish at the best of times, and dyed specimens quickly succumb to Whitespot or Lymphocystis.

J*Hawk*83
04-15-2011, 11:23 AM
:exactly:

Jake
04-15-2011, 11:41 AM
Ugh. Idiots. I'm all for selective breeding, but not to the detriment of the fish.

:mad:

OOwl
04-15-2011, 12:44 PM
Most of those are hideous but, of course, I kind of like that longfin koi (the girl with the veiltail oscar WOULD say that, huh? :)).

newkid
04-15-2011, 01:25 PM
the long fin koi looks stronger than me lolroflmaoroflmao

RichardB
04-15-2011, 02:16 PM
i gotta say, that flowerhorn does look pretty good :P

Typical Tony
04-15-2011, 02:18 PM
A lot of those i see no problems with 'cept the ones where they dyed the fish, which is totally unnatural.

greeneyed
04-15-2011, 02:19 PM
*ducks*

I want some of those glowing angelfish...

Be like a moving blacklight poster:Smoker:

Jlowe17
04-15-2011, 02:20 PM
I very much loath the looks of Parrotheads (the fish, not the fans of J. Buffett) as well as balloon-bodied fish. Yuk.

txsharker
04-15-2011, 02:39 PM
after reading that and a few other articles over the years it makes me realize man can really screw up nature. all of the colors are very pretty but I think nature's colors are very pretty as well.

RichardB
04-15-2011, 02:47 PM
after reading that and a few other articles over the years it makes me realize man can really screw up nature. all of the colors are very pretty but I think nature's colors are very pretty as well.
definitely agree on that lol

Deltad
04-15-2011, 02:48 PM
after reading that and a few other articles over the years it makes me realize man can really screw up nature. all of the colors are very pretty but I think nature's colors are very pretty as well.

that's a well put point. fishes in nature are already BEAUTIFUL w/o man f*ing it up

Typical Tony
04-15-2011, 02:56 PM
beauty is in the eye of the beholder... same can be said for dogs or cats.

NursePlaty
04-16-2011, 02:29 AM
Having a tank full of glow in the dark fish at night would be a very nice sight lol.

mackinthebox
04-16-2011, 03:38 AM
I dont have any real issue with genetically modified fish
the glow in the dark fish are kinda cool, I would mind having the glowing angel and the other glowing fish
I would also like some of those long finned tetras

its amazing we can find the genes that make those changes and either switch them on or splice them in

when its available sign me up for the beefcake gene, lets ramp up my metabolism and get it more in line with my friends that can eat whatever they want and not gain a pound... lol

the others are kinda ugly, but if someone likes em then rock on, let em have their cool fish

as for the one that had 2 heads, its no different than the cow with 2 heads
sure, it may have died in nature but so would most of the handicapped people we give placards, special parking, and creative pieces of tech to assist them with their living condition

my only concern would be some of those genetically modified fish getting into the wild, but if that happened then they would probably wind up dead anyway as theyre going to stand out more

how cool would it be to see a river full of glowing angel fish though? :tease:

as for the poor fish with the dye injections... yeah, thats a lot harder to agree with
injecting a fish and then letting it succumb to disease and infection, thats just cruel
at least the genetically modified fish lead a normal fish life and dont die of infections...

now im going to run off to google and find me a glow in the dark angelfish...

mackinthebox added 2 Minutes and 14 Seconds later...

awe, theyre not up for sale yet...
the company just succeeded in creating them
maybe soon, lol

NursePlaty
04-16-2011, 04:12 AM
Now we just need glow in the dark shrimps. :exactly:

yblueskyy
05-06-2011, 02:20 AM
yummy flowerhorn

hungdang
05-11-2011, 05:20 PM
I found you stupid when you put the two head arowana in the list! it is a problem that can happen to any animal and people, they can even get that in the wild. That 2 head aro is well over $50,000, if it is a deformed fish cause by selective breeding then their would be more of them already!

newbie
05-17-2011, 10:35 PM
flowerhorn would get my vote