Gold Fish
Gold Fish
Gold Fish
Gold Fish
Gold Fish
Gold Fish

Gold Fish

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  • Rs. 25.00
  • Regular price Rs. 40.00
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Goldfish are very sensitive and should not be touched. This can hurt them and make them sick. They may also get other health problems. Their stomachs can fill with liquids (water). They can get sick because of bad bacteria

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Goldfish Care Guide — Everything You Need to Know

Goldfish (Carassius auratus) are the world's most widely kept freshwater fish, domesticated from wild carp over 1,000 years ago in ancient China. Today the species encompasses over 200 recognised varieties, from the streamlined Common Goldfish and torpedo-shaped Comet to the round-bodied Fancy Goldfish varieties — Oranda, Ryukin, Telescope Eye, Ranchu, and Lionhead. Despite their reputation as "starter fish," goldfish are long-lived, cold-water animals with specific tank requirements that differ significantly from tropical fish. This complete goldfish care guide covers everything a hobbyist needs — tank size, water parameters, feeding, compatible tank mates, and types. FishyKart delivers healthy goldfish across India with live arrival guarantee.

Fancy goldfish Carassius auratus in aquarium

Goldfish Tank Size — The Most Common Mistake

The biggest error new goldfish keepers make is under-sizing the tank. Carassius auratus is a large, messy, high-bioload fish — not a bowl fish. Here are the correct goldfish tank size minimums:

  • Single Common or Comet Goldfish: 75 litres (20 gallons) minimum; 150+ litres recommended as adults reach 25–30 cm
  • Single Fancy Goldfish (Oranda, Ryukin, Ranchu): 60 litres (15 gallons) minimum; 20 gallons per additional fish
  • Pond goldfish (Shubunkin, Koi-type single-tails): 1,000+ litres pond volume; these are not aquarium fish long-term
  • Goldfish bowls: Not suitable for any variety — insufficient oxygen, filtration, and swimming space

Goldfish produce significantly more ammonia than tropical fish of equal size. A correctly sized tank with strong mechanical and biological filtration is non-negotiable for long-term health.

Common Goldfish vs Fancy Goldfish — Key Differences

Understanding the common goldfish vs fancy goldfish distinction is essential before choosing a variety:

  • Common Goldfish (Carassius auratus auratus): Single tail, streamlined body, active swimmer. Reaches 25–35 cm in open water. Best suited to ponds or large aquaria. Hardy, tolerant of temperatures 5–25 °C.
  • Comet: Like Common but with a deeply forked, elongated tail. Fast swimmer; requires space. Frequently seen in feeder goldfish tanks, but can live 15+ years when properly kept.
  • Shubunkin: Calico colouration (red, orange, black, white, blue patches) on a single-tailed body. Hardy like Common; best in ponds.
  • Fancy Goldfish (Oranda, Ryukin, Ranchu, Telescope, Lionhead, Pearlscale): Double tail, round body, slow swimmers. Require warmer water (18–24 °C), pristine water quality, and no competition from faster fish. Should never be mixed with single-tailed varieties.
Fancy goldfish varieties Oranda Ryukin in aquarium tank

Water Parameters for Goldfish

Goldfish are cold-water fish — not tropical. Goldfish care requires different temperature management than most freshwater aquarium fish:

  • Temperature: 18–22 °C for Fancy varieties; 10–25 °C for Common/Comet/Shubunkin. No heater required in most Indian homes (except winter in north India)
  • pH: 7.0–8.0 — slightly alkaline, matching their natural carp ancestry
  • Hardness (GH): 8–12 dGH; moderate hardness beneficial for scale and bone health
  • Ammonia / Nitrite: 0 ppm always — goldfish are extremely sensitive to nitrogen spikes due to their high bioload
  • Nitrate: Below 20 ppm; perform 30% water changes twice weekly for goldfish tanks
  • Dissolved Oxygen: High — add surface agitation or an air stone; goldfish require more oxygen than tropical fish

Goldfish Feeding Guide

Proper feeding is a critical element of goldfish care. Overfeeding is the leading cause of tank pollution and digestive problems in Carassius auratus.

  • Staple food: Sinking or floating goldfish pellets (28–32% protein, low fat) — sinking pellets reduce air ingestion and swim bladder problems in Fancy varieties
  • Vegetables: Blanched peas (shelled), spinach, romaine lettuce, and zucchini — beneficial for digestion, 2–3× per week
  • Protein: Frozen or live daphnia and bloodworm, 1–2× per week as treats
  • Feeding frequency: 2–3 small meals per day; feed only what can be consumed in 2 minutes
  • Fasting: One day per week without food helps clear the digestive system and reduces swim bladder issues
Goldfish feeding in freshwater aquarium Carassius auratus

Goldfish Types — Complete Overview

The Carassius auratus species includes many distinct goldfish types, each with specific care considerations:

  • Oranda: Large wen (fleshy head growth), double-tailed, round-bodied. Requires clean water as wen can trap debris and develop infections
  • Ryukin: Pronounced dorsal hump, deep red-and-white colouration, compact round body. Hardy among Fancy varieties
  • Ranchu: No dorsal fin, curved back, tucked tail — the "King of Goldfish" in Japanese Nishiki-goi tradition. Requires pristine water and a wide, shallow tank
  • Telescope Eye: Protruding, spherical eyes (deme-kin). Eyes are fragile — sharp tank decorations must be avoided
  • Pearlscale: Round body with domed, pearl-like scales. Most susceptible to swim bladder issues
  • Common & Comet: Single-tailed, active, fast-growing. Best for ponds or very large aquaria

Why Buy from FishyKart?

FishyKart stocks a curated range of goldfish types — from standard Common and Comet goldfish to premium Fancy varieties including Oranda, Ryukin, and Ranchu. All fish are sourced from vetted breeders, quarantined for 14 days, and health-checked before dispatch. We offer live arrival guarantee with express delivery across India. Internal links: White Koi Fish | Flowerhorn Cichlid | All Live Fish.

Frequently Asked Questions

How big do goldfish get?

Common goldfish reach 25–35 cm (10–14 inches) in ponds with adequate space. Fancy goldfish varieties typically reach 15–20 cm (6–8 inches). Size is heavily influenced by tank volume — fish in small tanks experience stunted growth due to waste hormone build-up, not a biological limit on final size.

What do goldfish eat?

Goldfish eat sinking or floating goldfish pellets as a staple, supplemented with blanched vegetables (peas, spinach, zucchini) 2–3 times per week and occasional frozen daphnia or bloodworm as protein treats. Feed 2–3 small meals daily, only what they can consume in 2 minutes. Overfeeding is the most common cause of poor water quality in goldfish tanks.

Can goldfish live with tropical fish?

Goldfish should not be kept with tropical fish. Goldfish require cooler water (18–22 °C) while tropical fish need 24–28 °C — this temperature range is too warm for goldfish long-term and causes stress, disease susceptibility, and shortened lifespan. Goldfish also produce significantly more ammonia than most tropical species.

How long do goldfish live?

Common goldfish live 10–15 years in well-maintained tanks, with some pond specimens reaching 20+ years. Fancy goldfish varieties typically live 5–10 years. The world record for a captive goldfish is 43 years. Lifespan depends primarily on water quality, tank size, and diet — not luck.

What is the difference between fancy and common goldfish?

Common goldfish have a single tail, streamlined body, and are fast, active swimmers that reach 25–35 cm. Fancy goldfish have a double tail, rounded body, and are slow swimmers reaching 15–20 cm. The two types should never be mixed in the same tank — common goldfish outcompete fancy varieties for food and can injure them.

How often should I change goldfish tank water?

Goldfish tanks require 25–30% water changes twice per week due to the high bioload these fish produce. In heavily stocked tanks or smaller volumes, more frequent changes may be necessary. Test ammonia and nitrite weekly — if either reads above 0 ppm, perform an immediate 50% water change and investigate filtration capacity.

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