[Video transcript]
Anything strike you as special about this fish here?
Well, it’s worth 1.8 million dollars. It won grand champion at the All Japan Koi Show in 2017, and is the most expensive koi fish ever sold.
Koi may just look like an oversized goldfish, but they’re not even remotely related. Koi are actually a type of carp, and today they’re some of the most expensive pet fish in the world. But why?
Koi were originally raised in Japan in the 1700s when rice farmers first began breeding them for their distinct colors and patterns, similar to how we breed dogs for their specific traits.
And just like prized dog breeds, Japanese people take koi breeding very seriously. There are regular competitions to name the top koi.
Judges and buyers pay attention to how healthy its skin looks, its size and body shape, and how gracefully the fish moves in the water. But the most important trait of all is the koi’s coloring. The best koi have a good balance of colors and patterns according to their variety. For example, there are koi with light blue spots, ones with large red patches on their backs, or all-metallic gold.
But the most winning fish often just boil down to these three varieties. They’re often the most valuable. They dominate the shows, winning nearly every major category each year.
And the better-looking the fish, the more a buyer is willing to pay.
Yvo: Yeah, it depends. You can buy some small and cheap koi fish for a couple of bucks, but also, yeah, it can get up really, really high to thousands, ten thousands of dollars.
Narrator: That’s Yvo de Wal. He’s a koi hobbyist and seller in the Netherlands, and he heads up the YouTube channel Koi Partner. Each year he visits Japan to shop for koi.
Yvo: The breeders are located there, and they have experience with their bloodlines for many, many generations.
Narrator: You see, bloodlines are just as prized in koi as they are in dogs because some of these koi are the result of decades of selective breeding.
I mean, just take a look at the koi’s wild relative, the common carp. Its dark colors would be considered unattractive for a koi, but it’s perfect protection against predators in the wild.
So how do you get from this to this? Well, it’s actually similar to how we got from this to this, except koi breeders mainly select for size and color and ignore … fluffiness.
Koi have six types of color cells in their skin. Their cells can be red, yellow, black, white, blue, or metallic.
Now in order to get a beautiful, reddish-orange pattern like the one on this 1.8 million dollar fish, you need to select for fish that have a white body and lots of red cells that concentrate in large patches.
Red and white are important colors in Japanese culture, representing joy and purity.
But having the right colors is only part of it. A koi’s color cells sit at different depths in the skin, some right near the surface and some deeper in, which ultimately determines how bright the fish appears.
The brighter the fish, the bigger the price tag. Today there are about 120 varieties.
To compare, there are about 200 breeds of dogs. But when it comes down to it, breeding koi is a lot harder. A single koi can give birth to hundreds of thousands of baby fish at a time.
Yvo: I think we are talking about millions and millions of fish per breeder.
Narrator: So breeders must choose wisely. One breeder, for example, reports that he starts with 3 million fish and selects 15,000 to raise over the first year. From that he chooses 1,000 to continue to raise the second year.
Yvo: Yeah, it’s a really hard job for the breeders.
Narrator: But in the end, all that hard work is worth it. The breeder of this grand champion waited until she was nine years old to sell her at auction. And by bringing in a world record of 1.8 million, the breeder got not only a huge return on investment but a priceless reputation boost in the koi community.
Source: Business Insider
WORD BANK:
strike sb + Adj /straɪk/ (expression): khiến ai đó thấy thế nào
carp /kɑːp/ (n): cá chép
breeding /ˈbriː.dɪŋ/ (n): việc nhân giống
breeder /ˈbriː.dər/ (n): người làm nghề lai tạo giống động vật
distinct /dɪˈstɪŋkt/ [C1] (adj): riêng biệt
pattern /ˈpæt.ən/ (n): hoa văn
trait /treɪt/ [C2] (n): đặc điểm
prized /praɪzd/ (adj): quý hiếm
take sth serious(ly) (expression): coi trọng điều gì
graceful /ˈɡreɪs·fəl/ (adj): duyên dáng
patch /pætʃ/ [C2] (n): mảng
metallic (adj): màu ánh kim
it boils down to sth (idiom): tóm lại là điều gì
dominate /ˈdɒm.ɪ.neɪt/ [B2] (n): thống trị
buck /bʌk/ (n – informal): đô la Mỹ
narrator /nəˈreɪ.tər/ [C2] (n): người dẫn chuyện
hobbyist /ˈhɒb.i.ɪst/ (n): người có sở thích về cái gì
bloodline /ˈblʌd.laɪn/ (n): huyết thống, dòng máu
selective /sɪˈlek.tɪv/ [C1] (adj): mang tính chọn lọc
predator /ˈpred.ə.tər/ [C1] (n): kẻ săn mồi
fluffy /ˈflʌf.i/ (adj): lắm lông
joy /dʒɔɪ/ [B2] (n): niềm vui
purity /ˈpjʊr·ət̬·i/ (n): sự tinh khiết
wise (adj): khôn ngoan
auction /ˈɔːk.ʃən/ [C1] (n): đấu giá
return on investment (business terms): tỷ suất lợi nhuận trên vốn đầu tư
reputation /ˌrep.jəˈteɪ.ʃən/ [B2] (n): danh tiếng
ỦNG HỘ READ TO LEAD!
Chào bạn! Có thể bạn chưa biết, Read to Lead là một trang giáo dục phi lợi nhuận với mục đích góp phần phát triển cộng đồng người học tiếng Anh tại Việt Nam. Chúng tôi không yêu cầu người đọc phải trả bất kỳ chi phí nào để sử dụng các sản phẩm của mình để mọi người đều có cơ hội học tập tốt hơn. Tuy nhiên, nếu bạn có thể, chúng tôi mong nhận được sự hỗ trợ tài chính từ bạn để duy trì hoạt động của trang và phát triển các sản phẩm mới.
Bạn có thể ủng hộ chúng tôi qua 1 trong 2 cách dưới đây.
– Cách 1: Chuyển tiền qua tài khoản Momo.
Số điện thoại 0947.886.865 (Chủ tài khoản: Nguyễn Tiến Trung)
Nội dung chuyển tiền: Ủng hộ Read to Lead
hoặc
– Cách 2: Chuyển tiền qua tài khoản ngân hàng.
Ngân hàng VIB chi nhánh Hải Phòng
Số tài khoản: 012704060048394 (Chủ tài khoản: Nguyễn Tiến Trung)
Nội dung chuyển tiền: Ủng hộ Read to Lead
Wow, it’s very helpful. Thank you for sharing!