19
May

they are a decent size and they still look like females with a dull colour… but there anal fin isn’t round……


Answer:
Maybe you have caught a wild guppy.

Wild guppy mostly found in pond, lake,drain and other natural area.

They’re seldom rare by humane and often being given to canivorous fish as diet / food.

The body and tail size, spots of pterin and carotenoid (red, orange, and yellow), melanin (black and fuzzy black), and structural color (iridescent blue, green, and silver). It is comon for these color patterns to vary in size, shape, and position among individual males to such a degree that one could easily identify individuals within a group.

But the most important thing you must notice is that the colouration of wild guppy is often dull in colour and range in the colors blue, green, red, yellow, purple, silver and black. These colors result by the presence of a particular set of chromatophores colored areas.And is not as colourful as guppies we see in captive breeding.

Hope my answer will solve your questions.


Answer:
When released into the wild by kind but foolish owners who don't want them anymore, guppies revert rapidly back to their wild form. The plain fish which you have caught.

To try and selectively breed them back to fancy guppies would take decades or centuries I'm afraid. These wild plain guppies also tend to be nasty tiny critters when it comes to nipping the fins of any fancy tankmates, be they guppies, bettas or any others with flowing fins.

What to do with them….. ? Good question…

Maybe get yourself an oscar to feed them to!


Answer:
Unlike the fancy guppies that bred specially for their color, wild guppies have very little color are bland.

Answer:
wild guppies look a lot more draber than the ones you purchase in the aquariums

Answer:
thats because they are wild guppies unlike fancy guppies thjat is in the pet store thats normal for wild guppeis

This entry was posted on Monday, May 19th, 2008 at 1:28 am and is filed under Pregnancy. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

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