Fish with a deformed spinal chord are usually destroyed and do not turn up for sale. (except as feeder fish)There is nothing you can do for it. MY advice is to euthanise it.
There are many different types of spine problems that may be called a bent spine. Some are kyphosis and scoliosis. A treatment for scoliosis or kyphosis can be a back brace, or in severe cases corrective surgery.
The shape of a fishes tail is decided by its genetic makeup. There is no "treatment" for a bent tail.
Yes it isyes, goldfish have backbones and therefore are vertebratesGoldfish have a spine, so are classed as a vertebrate.Yeah.Yes. Goldfish, like all fish, are vertebrates. They have a backbone, which is the characteristic shared by vertebrates.
Treatment options for fish with a bent spine may include adjusting water parameters, providing a balanced diet, and using medications or surgeries as recommended by a veterinarian specializing in aquatic animals.
your mumma bent over
fast collission with something.
Since goldfish are bred in captivity, there aren't a lot of wild goldfish. Goldfish live in lakes and ponds and have no need to migrate. During winter they hibernate in the frozen water. They are active in the Spring and Summer when they breed and grow.
Some common breeds of goldfish are: the Black Moor goldfish, the Ryunkin goldfish, the comet goldfish, the common goldfish, the Calico Fantail goldfish, the telescope eye goldfish, the bubble eye goldfish, the pearl scale goldfish and the Oranda goldfish.
Goldfish can be divided into two groups, single-tailed and twin/double-tailed goldfish. A single-tailed goldfish is a variety of goldfish with a single tail such as the Comet, Common or Shubunkin (poor man's koi). These varieties are much closer to the wild form of the fish and as such are hardy but require more space. Twin-tailed goldfish are often referred to as fancy goldfish. Fancy goldfish varieties are more delicate and have a 'fat' appearance. Some twin-tailed varieties are the Fantail, Pearlscale, Ryunkin, Blackmoor and the Celestial-eye. It is not advisable to mix twin-tailed and single-tailed goldfish together, as the single-tailed goldfish are more active and swift and may bully twin-tailed varieties as well as forcing them to compete for food.
of course it makes you a little bit shorter if you have something and you bend it, it gets shorter its the same with scoliosis the spine is bent so the body is shorter people who have the correction surgery end up gaining a few inched at the end of it when their spine is straight
No, goldfish are a type of fish; fish that happen to eat insects.Fish (goldfish) and insects are both in the Animalia kingdom. From there they split into two different phylum. Goldfish have a backbone and insects do not. Goldfish are in the Chordata phylum and an insect fits into the Arthropoda phylum.From there, chordates are split up into their class. These classes include amphibians, birds, reptiles, mammals, many classes of fish and a few other classes. The goldfish and 96% of all fish happens to fit the Actinopterygil Class, a ray-finned fish (webs of skin that are supported by bony/horny spines).The goldfish is then classified byOrder: CypriniformesFamily: CyprinidaeGenus: CarrasiusSpecies: C. auratus
It quite possibly has a deformed spine. This is common in very inbred fish. Your glofish is in actual fact a Zerba Danio with an added gene from a jellyfish that makes it glow.