Unclassified Strain
An unclassified-strain rohu is a Labeo rohita recorded only to species, without enough information to assign it to a local, improved, or hatchery strain. Rohu is the best-known rui carp of the Indian subcontinent, a river-spawning cyprinid with a moderately deep body, silvery flanks, darker back, and reddish fins in many farm stocks. Named strains may be selected for faster growth, better survival, or regional adaptation, while unclassified fish may come from market seed, mixed brood ponds, or older hatchery lines whose records were lost. Color terms such as albino, gold, piebald, or melanistic usually describe rare variants rather than the normal production phenotype.
For farmers and researchers, unclassified does not automatically mean inferior, but it limits how confidently performance can be predicted. Seed should be evaluated for uniform size, active swimming, clean gills and skin, and freedom from obvious deformities before stocking. Ponds for rohu need warm, oxygenated water and enough natural productivity or supplemental feed to support steady growth, especially in polyculture where rohu occupy much of the water column. Hatcheries using unclassified brood fish should mark families or source groups when possible, rotate broodstock responsibly, and avoid selling the offspring as a named strain without documentation.
Colors: Albino, Black, Blue, Brown, Gold, Gray, Green, Leucistic, Melanistic, Mottled, Orange, Piebald, Red, Silver, Spotted, Striped, White, Wild Type, Yellow