Learn About Koi Fish

Koi have been kept for thousands of years through out East Asia, but a lot we have today were introduced from Japan in the 1800s.

Koi attach their sticky eggs to water plants or any object submerged in the water. The young hatch as larvae and stay in warm, shallow flooded areas until they are large enough to brave more open waterways.

Koi are omnivorous and opportunists – they will try to eat anything they think is edible including insects, fish, and plants.

Koi have an average lifespan of 40 years. It is believed that the oldest-known koi lived to be nearly 230 years old; the age was determined by testing the fish’s scales, which produce growth rings much like a tree.

Bunch of Nishikigoi koi variety, the colorful Amur carp (cyprinus rubrofuscus), swimming actively in the outdoor pond. Selective focus.

Koi are carp that have been selectively breed by humans to produce the beautiful colors we see today. Koi are specifically bred to viewed from the top, with most of their colors concentrated in that area of the body.

Most Koi will get to 12-15 inches long, but some can reach 20 inches and the Jumbo Koi can get up to 3 feet in length.

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