30th June 2015.
Gold Fish Thrown into Fish Tank as Prey Survives Against Odds !!
Posted on the 01 May 2019 by Sampathkumar Sampath
Survival
skills are techniques a person would use
in a dangerous situation to save self. It is not only tools and technics, more
importantly, the attitude and frame of mind, the will to survive. One may read countless books and watch so
many videos – but the ground reality could be far different !successful are
those who fight odds !
Fishes are
attractive and pleasing to look at – there are many species of aquarium fish
that are kept in smaller tanks. Gold
fish in a small round bowl looks pretty
pleasing to eyes! Some species of
Gold fish and koi are amongst the most common pets of modern aquarium. Gold fish exist in a far wider range of
colours than the name implies. They are considered one of the earliest domesticated
fish. We tend to think that aquarium
pets live in protected environment and if introduced to natural lake or other
water bodies, could get killed and could vanish soon ! – perhaps not the case
!!
A few centuries
ago, keeping goldfish on bowls became a fashion. The ensuing frenzy of artificial breeding
produced hundreds of varieties of goldfish we see today. While the different goldfish breeds have
features that "satisfied human preference and curiosity", their
ornate tail fins are "fancy but uncontrollable" and their bodies are
"unfittingly fat", according to a 2009 paper of the Tokai University
School of Medicine in Isehara, Japan. Goldfish
according to BBC Science are one of the most studied animals in the field of
visual perception and cognition.
Years back, saw a big fat somewhat ugly
looking fish displayed in a big tank in a friend's place. It was Arowana, reportedly costing a lakh !
- people consider it lucky and keeping it would bring good .. and feeding it,
the man dropped some live fishes in to the tank – for a second I felt bad for
those preys and also thought that for some even those would be of some cost. Read
this interesting post in MailOnline on a goldfish thrown into an aquarium tank
as a snack for bigger fish, managing to hide from its predators, surviving and
being discovered – a good seven years
later - now been given its own display
The post is about a
live goldfish thrown into a fish tank as food has survived against all odds
after escaping into a filtration unit where it lived in total isolation for
seven years.The plucky fish was discovered by staff at Japan's Shima Marineland
during a routine clean out of the filtration unit - and has become an overnight
sensation.
The living
conditions for the goldfish in the tank appear to have been perfect - it had grown to 10inches in length
and fed off food scraps which passed through the filter.It has now been given
its own exhibition at Shima Marineland (pictured) in Japan, where its tale of
survival draws large crowds.
The incredible tale
of survival began seven years ago when the carnivorous arapaima displayed at
the aquarium were fed live fish, Yahoo Japan reported.These fearsome creatures,
native to South America and the Amazon, can grow up to 13ft in length and eat
smaller fish.The hero baby gold fish was
thrown into the tank as live bait but managed to evade the predators by
swimming down a 1cm-wide gap.Following the pipework, it ended up in the
filtration unit where it lived in total seclusion and darkness for seven years,
feeding off food scraps which made their way into the tank.
When found, its
only deficiency was its color. Because there was no sunlight in the filtration
tank, it turned a shade of light yellow rather than dark gold. Though it makes an interesting read – how somebody
remembered a tiny fish thrown seven
years earlier – why no similar fish were thrown 0r how people now say it is the
fish thrown 7 years ago – all defies common logic.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
30th June 2015.
30th June 2015.