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- Martin Thoene
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- crazy loaches
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- Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 7:12 am
- Location: Gahanna, Ohio
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- palaeodave
- Posts: 1370
- Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2006 5:25 am
- Location: London/York
Artificial selection to produce long-finned varieties of any fish takes many generations of spawnings. The only clown loach breeding on the necessary scale to do that is hormone induced by large companies. If they managed to breed that fish deliberately, don't you think there would be more of them around? That they'd want to cash in on their massive investment? Despite some of the surprising knee-jerk reactions I saw (and I really was surprised at some people), I am 99.99% certain that there was no deliberate human intervention to produce this fish. It just doesn't fit.Ded1 wrote:So, we know what owner says.
How many of you believe that this fish "just happened" and no human "intervention" was present?
I agree.palaeodave wrote:Artificial selection to produce long-finned varieties of any fish takes many generations of spawnings. The only clown loach breeding on the necessary scale to do that is hormone induced by large companies. If they managed to breed that fish deliberately, don't you think there would be more of them around? That they'd want to cash in on their massive investment? Despite some of the surprising knee-jerk reactions I saw (and I really was surprised at some people), I am 99.99% certain that there was no deliberate human intervention to produce this fish. It just doesn't fit.Ded1 wrote:So, we know what owner says.
How many of you believe that this fish "just happened" and no human "intervention" was present?
Well, my loach looks pretty normal, apart from his tail mutation. I don't think he is a victim of some intensive farming - just a really pretty boy and unique to me.
All his body shape is right, he just has that little notch on his fin. I can definitely confirm that this has grown that way and has not resulted from an accident or injury - the veins run uniformly into this extra piece.

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The dorsal looks a bit frayed and he's quite pale but as long as the finnage doesn't interfere in his mobility, I find it interesting. Uniquely patterned loaches are cool, too.
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Personally, it is disgusting.
And I still believe it is just matter of time, when they will start manipulating with some injection, to change those fins, like with gold fish.
Sure, they are hard to breed, but if buyers will like it, capitalism will find a way to change this monster into profit...just a matter of time.
And I still believe it is just matter of time, when they will start manipulating with some injection, to change those fins, like with gold fish.
Sure, they are hard to breed, but if buyers will like it, capitalism will find a way to change this monster into profit...just a matter of time.
- crazy loaches
- Posts: 708
- Joined: Thu Sep 28, 2006 7:12 am
- Location: Gahanna, Ohio
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I agree, looks very normal and just fine, just a slight irregularity that shouldnt really impact it in any way. I'd be happy to have an interesting clown like this.midman wrote:Well, my loach looks pretty normal, apart from his tail mutation. I don't think he is a victim of some intensive farming - just a really pretty boy and unique to me.All his body shape is right, he just has that little notch on his fin. I can definitely confirm that this has grown that way and has not resulted from an accident or injury - the veins run uniformly into this extra piece.
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