Nope.
the monk intrudeced common carp to eat then developed mirror carp so that they didnt have to take as many scales visit www.carpmaster.webs.com for pics
While most fish scales are made of out cartilage (collagen), some fish (such as tilapia and carp) have scales that are made from chitin.
No. Buffalo fish is native of North America and carp is native of Asia. Although they are commonly confused for the other, buffalo and carp, are not related of species. German Carp are yellow to green in color with small whiskers at the corner of their mouths. Asian Carp are silver with scales like shad. Grass Carp which are a type of Asian carp are more greenish yellow with large scales like the buffalo. Buffalo are light brown to black depending on the color water with large scales there are three types of buffalo. Same colors just different body shape.
yellowish member of the carp family beginning with letter b fish has silver scales
yes but it would probably choke you In America, some people eat Carp, but they remove the scales first.
While scales of fish are made of different materials (bone, cartilage, etc.), fish such as carp have scales that are made out of chitin (a polysaccharide that is both flexible and strong).
Yes, carp is kosher. For a list of kosher/non-kosher fish, please see Related Links:
Yes, goldfish are kosher! They are part of the carp family which have both fins and scales fulfilling the laws of kashrut.
According to Chinese mythology, Chinese dragon scales were said to resemble the scales of a carp, so the best I can say is that they look like large fish scales. You can also type in "Asian dragons" in Google images and look from there.
Carp the answer is CARP
The carp we commonly refer to when using that name are the common carp, the grass carp, the bighead carp, the silver carp and the Crucian carp. Certainly there are other fish is this very large family. You may recognize koi as carp, and there are many other members of this group of fish. A full list of them would number in three digits.
what type of carp pellet do carp prefer