Mixed Strain
A mixed strain mrigal carp is Cirrhinus mrigala stock drawn from more than one broodfish source rather than from a single documented line. Mrigal, one of the Indian major carps, is native to South Asian river systems and is widely farmed in warm ponds. It has a streamlined silvery body, a small inferior mouth, and bottom-feeding habits that fit well with polyculture alongside rohu and catla. Mixed strains may combine local hatchery fish, farm-selected broodstock, and older river-derived lines.
For producers, a mixed strain can provide useful genetic breadth, but it can also mask uneven growth, variable survival, or hidden inbreeding if spawning is poorly managed. Hatcheries usually benefit from keeping broodstock numbers high, rotating families, and recording where parent fish came from. In grow-out ponds, mrigal are commonly managed for the lower feeding zone and given supplemental feed along with natural pond productivity. Stocking mixed fish into open waters should be approached carefully, especially where native populations or conservation programs are involved.
Colors: Albino, Black, Blue, Brown, Gold, Gray, Green, Leucistic, Melanistic, Mottled, Orange, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Striped, White, Wild Type, Yellow