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Through
extensive research, nutritionists have discovered that by adding
certain ingredients to the diet, the colour of certain animals can
be improved or enhanced. This is particularly true of koi and other
pondfish.

Spirulina,
marigold meal, alfalfa, krill and other curious products are often
included in the diet as colour enhancers. In December 1999, there
was even a report of a girls skin temporarily taking on an
orange hue after drinking considerable volumes of a leading fresh
orange juice.
What
are they?
Colour
enhancers are natural pigments which when fed in the diet enhance
the colour of fish flesh or skin.
Carotenoids
are the colour pigments responsible for enhancing skin colour some
of which include: alpha carotene, beta carotene, astaxanthin and
canthaxanthin. They are available in a range of natural products
including algae, flowers, aquatic invertebrates and yeasts and some
are also manufactured synthetically.
Generally
natural sources of carotenoids provide a wide spectrum of colour
enhancers producing good colour, however they can be quite unstable
and prone to variations in quality. Synthetic colour enhancers provide
a guaranteed content of specific carotenoids but do not offer the
wide range of carotenoids found in natural products.
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Colour
enhancers are used widely in the salmon and trout industry where
they are used to enhance the pink in flesh. Carp have the added
ability of being able to convert some carotenoids such as zeaxanthin
(orange/yellow) into the more desirable astaxanthin (red) in their
skin, thereby enhancing the red colouration on the fish.
Great
care and expertise is required in the formulation of colour enhancing
diets to provide suitable quality carotenoids in the correct quantities.
If koi are fed excessive amounts of xanthophyll and other specific
carotenoids then previously unpigmented white skin can become pink
reducing the overall appeal and quality of the fish.
How
do they work?
Fish
skin contains colour cells called xanthocytes which contain pigment
carrying chromatophores. Chromatophores can be divided into melanophores
(black) and lipophores (coloured) which contain the carotenoid pigments.
The
genetic make up of the fish controls the depth and colour of the
pigments in lipophores. Colour enhancers improve the pigment concentration
by laying down more carotenoids in the lipophores (colour cells).
The
more carotenoids in the diet the better?
There
is a limit to the quantity of extra carotenoid which can be stored
in each lipophore and therefore a limit to the extent to which the
colour of koi can be enhanced. Carotenoids cannot introduce new
colours in lipophores which are not coded for genetically, i.e.
an orange fish cannot be made red by feeding excessive quantities
of colour enhancers.
In
conclusion, good skin quality can only be achieved by feeding a
high quality balanced diet while maintaining an optimum water quality
environment. A good quality colour enhancing diet will contain a
wide range of quality colour enhancers and improve the colouration
on a healthy fish while not adversely affecting white areas.
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