Home1823 Edition

CARP

Volume 5 · 231 words · 1823 Edition

in Ichthyology, the English name of a species of cyprinus. See CYPRINUS, ICHTHYOLOGY Index.

The carp is the most valuable of all kinds of fish for stocking of ponds. It is very quick in its growth, and brings forth the spawn three times a year, so that the increase is very great. The female does not begin to breed till eight or nine years old; so that in breeding-ponds a supply must be kept of carp of that age. The best judges allow, that, in stocking a breeding-pond, four males should be allowed to twelve females. The usual growth of a carp is two or three inches in length in a year; but, in ponds which receive the fattening of common-sewers, they have been known to grow from five inches to 18 in one year. A feeding-pond of one acre extent will very well feed 300 carp of three years old, 300 of two years, and 400 of one year old. Carp delight greatly in ponds that have marly sides; they love also clay-ponds well sheltered from the winds and grown with weeds and long grass at the edges, which they feed on in the hot months. Carp and tench thrive very fast in ponds and rivers near the sea, where the water is a little brackish; but they are not so well tasted as those which live in fresh water.