Celestial Eye
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Celestial eye goldfish |
|---|
| Country of origin |
| China and Japan |
| Type |
| Fantailed |
| Breed standards |
| BAS |
Celestial eye goldfish or choten gan[1] is a fancy goldfish that has similar finnageto ryukins and fantails. It has a characteristic pair of telescope eyes which are turned upwards.[2]
Contents |
Celestials are a relatively small variety of goldfish that does not have dorsal fins. They come in all colors with either metallic or nacreous scales. They are delicate goldfish because, apart from sporting upward-oriented eyes, they are also sensitive to cold water temperatures, and are unable to compete with more vigorous goldfish for food. Therefore, these fancy goldfish are best kept in a tank of their own.[2][3]
The eyes of young celestials are normal but gradually protrudes sideways and then turn upwards within a period of six months.[2]
The toadhead or hama-tou in Japanese, is similar to the celestial eye but has more normal looking eyes, each supporting a small bladder-like growth beneath it.[2]
- ^ "Fishes in Nature and in the Aquarium" from Nutrafin News Aquatic magazine, Rolf C. Hagen (U.S.A.) Inc. and Rolf C. Hagen Corp. (Montreal, Canada), Issue #4, 2004
- ^ a b c d "An Interpet Guide to Fancy Goldfish" by Dr. Chris Andrews, Interpet Publications, 2002. - ISBN 1-902389-64-6
- ^ "Fancy Goldfish: A Complete Guide to Care and Collecting" by Dr. Erik L. Johnson, D.V.M. and Richard E. Hess, Weatherhill, Shambala Publications, Inc., 2006. - ISBN 0-8348-0448-4
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Black moor • Bubble eye • Butterfly tail • Celestial eye • Comet • Common • Fantail • Lionchu • Lionhead • Oranda • Panda moor • Pearlscale • Pompom • Ranchu • Ryukin • Shubunkin • Telescope eye • Veiltail |
