 Common goldfish
Common goldfish or 
hibuna [1] are a type of 
goldfish
 with no other modifications from their ancestors other than their 
colour. Most varieties of fancy goldfish were derived from this simple 
breed. Common goldfish come in a variety of colours including red, 
orange/gold, white, black Common goldfish are social animals who prefer living in groups. They are
 able to interact with any fish belonging to the same species. With 
provision of adequate care and attention, common goldfish can become 
tame. Once familiar with the face of its owner, swimming towards the 
fish keeper during feeding time can be observed and hand-feeding becomes
 possible. Small goldfish will normally avoid any form of human contact.
 However, this fear ceases in a middle-sized and mature goldfish. A 
full-grown goldfish is more likely to eat directly from the hands of its
 owner without evident hesitation. While this behavior is welcomed by 
goldfish owners, it proved problematic in outdoor ponds where predators 
may eat such friendly prey. Mature goldfish will also explore their 
surroundings through nibbling or grazing behavior.

Selective breeding has occurred in many colours for the  species. A few 
of the popular domestic goldfish available nowadays are  Black moor, 
panda moor, bubble attention, cornet, fantail and lionhead.  Also 
ryukin, telescope attention, ranchu, veiltail, oranda pearlscale,  
pompom, celestial attention and butterfly tail. A single goldfish has  
been recorded calculating as much as nineteen inches in size that is the
  most until date. These fish are primarily pool fish. As long as their 
 stays enough oxygen in the pool and the water doesnt freeze they do not
  face any problem. They are colourful, inexpensive and hardy by nature.
  Throughout cold temperatures they stop consuming and set in the bottom
  of the pond. One important things for his or her success is to help 
keep  the pool clean while they create a large amount of spend inside 
their  faeces and through their gills. Additionally they create a big 
volume of  compound spend which when perhaps not blocked becomes 
critical with  their survival. Crops are the best tool for filtering 
that spend while  they generate enough oxygen for his or her survival.



Black Moors (
Carassius auratus) have deep bodies and long, flowing finnage, along with characteristic protruding eyes.
[3] They are veiltailed and possess metallic scales with a 
velvet-like appearance.
[4]
Young Moors resemble bronze 
fantails. Their black coloration and eye protrusion develop with age .
[4]
 They can grow up to a length of 10 inches, but may not lose their 
velvet-like appearance with increasing age (life span: 6 to 25 years). 
Black demekins may also revert to metallic orange when exposed to warm 
water temperature.
[3][4]
 The fish can range in coloring anywhere from a lighter grey to a dark 
black, but most Black Moor goldfish don't stay pure black forever and 
many of them change colors from a rust color underbelly to orange 
splotches. Because their eyes are 

Indeed not. On his hook was a 15-inch-long (38-centimeter-long) goldfish
 that tipped the scales at 3 pounds (1.4 kilograms). Compare that to an 
average aquarium goldfish that generally measures just a few 
inches—their breeds come in a wide variety of sizes—and it doesn’t take 
long to figure out that this whopper of a fish is going to need a bigger
 bowl. (
See a picture of a see-through