Painted fish... yep.. they still exist

the whole thing about them not being able to close their mouths? however they were produced, they are members of the cichlid family. this means that they have pharyngeal (sp?) jaws - another set of jaws deeper in their mouths used for chewing food. it may look funny, but doesn't interfere with eating. this is so they can take foods all the way into thier mouths and chew on them inside so they don't get taken by another fish, or hold onto a prey fish with the outer jaws while eating them with the inner ones. think Alien.
 
I shouldn't get involved here, but I must make one comment, and then I will not say anything again in this thread. You say you are not a vegetarian, so you eat beef, chicken, etc because they are animals meant for food. By the same token, these fish are meant for decoration. Now I don't like dyed fish, it does seem cruel, but BPs are simply fish that have been selectively bred for their looks. Mules are sterile Donkey/Horse hybrids bred for strength. Why not a fish bred to look pretty, even if it is sterile? If you think that the beef and chicken you eat and the milk you drink (for just a couple of examples) have not been selectively bred to make them more profitable to those that produce them, you are sorely out of touch with the realities of the economy and business. Fish are also a business, just one producing ornaments rather than food. I don't like BP because I think they look funny, not because I am against hybridizing fish. Now an argument (Off-Topic) I can get behind is the totally illegalization of, and huge prison sentences for anyone keeping, viable, invasive, exotics that have the potential to wipe out entire eco-systems that have no defenses against them (Snakehead, etc.)

Selective breeding and test tube creation/genetic manipulation are two completely different subjects. I'm still torn on the glofish though. It's the same zebra danio, but with an added "attribute"..
 
It's a fairly touchy subject. I'm just glad Australia is strict with importing genetically modified animals.

Altho I did see dyed fish at the hospital... so I wonder where they came from. ****, maybe there's a local breeder!
 
There was no personal attack. There was simply good advice. If someone wants to whine and cry like a 5 year old about someone "calling fish names", they don't need to be involved in a discussion about them.

Corax - Telling someone to "go watch cartoons" and then calling them a 5 year old kinda sounds like a personal attack.

I understand that you feel strongly about this issue. I think you could have made your arguement without the attack. The attack implies that YOU do not want to be involved in a discussion either. I'll grant you that Dwarf Puffers' "do not judge" line was out of line as well. Notice that the moderator didn't single out you, Corax, because J double R was talking to BOTH of you! And frankly, you didn't need to continue the attack with the "5 year old" comment. Calling people names NEVER wins them to see your point-of-view on any issue. Just flakes for thought.

NOW :) that said, let's see if we can have a discussion. This will be more of an educational thing for me (I hope). And these questions/comments are open to anyone, not just Corax.

My first question was how in the heck do they "paint" fish? I have in my mind Japanese men in lab coats with jewelers glasses on with little tiny instruments telling the splattering fish on the dish to "stop moving". Only they say it in Japanese, so I don't hear that, but what else can they be saying. Okay, I searched the web. According to:

http://www.timstropicals.com/Inventory/NewWorld/BloodParrotInfo.asp

"There are also many variations of color which are produced through dipping these fish in stripping chemicals and then in brightly colored dyes. This stunts the growth and decreases the life span of the fish. Colors last for 4 – 6 weeks." The above link is reference 2 in the Wikipedia article on blood parrots:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_parrot_cichlid

Okay, from what I barely remember reading (I'm VERY new to the hobby), fish have some sort of protective lubricated mucous (what's it called?) that helps protect them from diseases. So to get the fish to "keep" the color longer they need to strip the mucous off. Then the fish are dumped into a dye and eventually into an disease-prone, over-crowded tank without that protective layer. Gee, I wonder why this stunts their growth and life span? :wall: Anyway, outside of the ethics of "painting" these fish, there is the ethics of selling a customer a fish that won't have the same color 4-6 weeks later. I wonder if they advertise that? lazyNode, do you know?

Second, Corax said that these fish were "test-tube". What exactly is done? I mean, a lot could be meant by that phrase. I know people who are "test-tube"! So, outside of the dyes or paint, how are these fish made? The issue for me is really the breeding. Is it completely laboratory test tube (insemination?) or tank crossbreeding? UCF-Planted claimed that "BPs are simply fish that have been selectively bred for their looks" which, to me, implies that it is NOT test tube. So his mule argument is interesting. It's hard to find information about this on the web. (One of the Wikipedia references which mentioned the jellybean phenomena claimed that those were bred that way!) It seems this question is difficult to answer because the sellers don't want to disclose their methods (business secrets). Corax, do you know of any good source on this?

I'm wondering because I'm not sure I would have much of a problem with the breeding thing, even if the end result was not fertile. In that sense, the mule argument works for me. If you introduce two species and they happen to mate and produce offspring, what's wrong with that?

The About.com article (reference 3 in the Wikipedia link) wasn't clear on the infertility issue. "Although Parrots have been known to mate and even lay eggs, generally they are infertile. There have been sporatic cases of successful spawnings, generally when they have been crossed with a non-hybrid fish." Generally does not mean ALWAYS to me. Although any pseudospecies with a low fertility rate is doomed to sexual selection likely. The more curious statement is the ability to crossbreed. There have been cases of mules doing that as well.

However, I don't particularly approve of the creation of BPs if crossbreeding via artificial insemination. In that sense the beef and chicken argument doesn't work for me. Artificial insemination is used (extensively, btw) in the dairy industry to produce cows that put out more milk, HOWEVER, they aren't creating some new infertile offspring. It is more akin to breeding in dogs for certain characteristics (e.g., sheperding instinct), a practice that has been going on for thousands of years. (Although, AI allows this at a much faster and possibly dangerous rate. What's more is that I don't think the price of milk has gone down because of the greater out put either... you see, cows that produce more milk are more expensive anyway!)

It all hinges on how they are created to me. And the way I just phrase that makes me wonder if it is a religious question. I mean, the breeding we do in dogs and cats and cows and swine isn't "natural" by any means, so is it just the creation of something new (the monster, the abomination, one website called it Frankenstein) that we have a problem with. Is it because God or Mother Nature didn't create it?

Sorry for the long post.
 
there is the ethics of selling a customer a fish that won't have the same color 4-6 weeks later. I wonder if they advertise that?

I bet the people that sell dyed fish without explaining that they lose colours after a few weeks are the same people who sell 5 goldfish with a 5 gallon bowl to little kids. They know the fish will die soon and that the customer may return and buy more fish. Even after that, if the customer is really keen on fish-keeping, then they will upgrade to a bigger tank. More money for the store.

In regards to the cows and chickens.
I am more likely to get sick from eating farmed chicken, as opposed to free range corn-fed chicken. That's just me.
Alot of people are unable to digest milk properly. And why is it thatwe are the only species that drink milk from another species, and continue to do so after childhood? We need milk from our mum when we are babies as thats the only food babies can take. OK thats going off topic.
In short. Mad-cow disease. Bird-flu. Mercury in fish. Worms in pork. Did I miss any mass produced meats?

Back to the fish. It's been proven that dyed fish suffer from health problems, inflamed livers etc. Over breeding of Neon Tetras have made them suspectable to the dreaded Neon Tetra Disease. Bubble-eye goldfish cannot swim properly and have trouble competing for food. I don't like the fact that this happens, but it does happen. I have Neons and I've learnt to avoid them in the future. And thanks to these forums I've learnt about dyed fish and I will not purchase them either.

If a fish has been modified/ breeded in such a way that it suffers, then I disagree with the practice.

With glo-fish. I am undecided until someone can prove that the fish suffers from defects or that it is more suspectable to diseases like the Neon Tetras. Until then I am sitting on the fence on that subject.
 
That entire species is an abomination anyway. They're test-tube fish that are so poorly formed they can't even close their mouths properly most of the time.. If ever a fish deserved to be boycotted, that's the one. Nice stocking level there too..


My feelings precisely.
 
That entire species is an abomination anyway. They're test-tube fish that are so poorly formed they can't even close their mouths properly most of the time.. If ever a fish deserved to be boycotted, that's the one. Nice stocking level there too..

Why should I not judge a genetic experiment that seems to have gone wrong? Who are you to tell me I cannot state my opinion of these fish? All of my LFS's are full of these mutants and I've never seen one that can close its mouth. To me, they're disgusting and shouldn't exist. I'm not saying to kill them all. I'm saying they should never have been created to begin with. If you can't handle such an opinion without getting offended, I suggest you go watch cartoons instead of trying to participate in a serious discussion about fish genetics.

You say that they are mutants, freaks, aliens, disgusting, and shouldnt exist, then you insult me.

Then you say...

So sad that such a creature is forced to exist. Nothing against the fish, they're cute little fish and all. I just wish mankind would stop screwing with things that don't need screwing with. We have thousands upon thousands of amazing fish occuring in nature, with no intervention from the hand of man. We don't need to force our thumbprint on everything =\

...that they're cute.

There was no personal attack. There was simply good advice. If someone wants to whine and cry like a 5 year old about someone "calling fish names", they don't need to be involved in a discussion about them.

Hmmmm, I believe that is a personal attack right there. I didn't whine and cry, I flamed you for saying that a fish is a disgusting mutant and, to the bottom line, should be destroyed. I thought AC was about LOVING and CARING for fish, not boycotting and killing them.

Selective breeding and test tube creation/genetic manipulation are two completely different subjects. I'm still torn on the glofish though. It's the same zebra danio, but with an added "attribute"..

Oh, and btw, you've got the 2 mixed up.

Parrots are bred with 2 cichlids, sometimes after with a male convict and a "normal" female BP.

BPs are either dipped in acid and then dye, or injected.

"Glo-Fish" are danios that are injected with jellyfish DNA at the egg stage, and look unnaturally colored the rest of their lives.

Which is the test tube fish?

Look, I'm not saying I support the breeding, selling and especially not the dyeing of this fish, I'm saying that they just shouldn't breed them, not kill them all, mount their heads on spears, and chant threats at anyone who owns one...

Oh, and a side note, I really appreciate the comments on me being a 5 year old, looks like someone here needs anger management :wtf: :angryfire:
 
Not all of them are dyed. The little gray ones are juveniles (that's how mine were when I bought them), and will turn bright orange as they grow.
 
You say that they are mutants, freaks, aliens, disgusting, and shouldnt exist, then you insult me.

I am not sure how this applies to and insults you, but yes, they are deformed, and should not have been created or perpetuated.

I thought AC was about LOVING and CARING for fish, not boycotting and killing them.

What Corax is saying (although perhaps not as diplomatically as possible) is more to the point of what being a responsible breeder and aquarist is about.

Oh, and btw, you've got the 2 mixed up.

Parrots are bred with 2 cichlids, sometimes after with a male convict and a "normal" female BP.

"Glo-Fish" are danios that are injected with jellyfish DNA at the egg stage, and look unnaturally colored the rest of their lives.

Which is the test tube fish?

I believe that he was attempting to speak figuratively, not literally

Look, I'm not saying I support the breeding, selling and especially not the dyeing of this fish, I'm saying that they just shouldn't breed them, not kill them all, mount their heads on spears, and chant threats at anyone who owns one...

Sounds like what Corax was saying...I recall no threats or calls for mass euthanisation.
 
Not all of them are dyed. The little gray ones are juveniles (that's how mine were when I bought them), and will turn bright orange as they grow.

I know, I just added how dyed ones are, and that they arnt "genetic test tube fish".

I am not sure how this applies to and insults you, but yes, they are deformed, and should not have been created or perpetuated.

It doesnt, read my quote and you'll see that Corax insulted me.
 
AquariaCentral.com