Shubunkins are similar to the common goldfish and comet goldfish in appearance. They were first bred in Japan, from crossbreeding the calicotelescope eye goldfish, comet goldfish, and the common goldfish c. 1900. They have streamlined bodies with well-developed and even fins. However, the Shubunkins are calico goldfish; they possess nacreous scales. The overlapping patches of red, white, blue, grey and black normally extend to the finnage of Shubunkins. Blue is the most prized colour in Shubunkins. Calico originally denoted three coloured varieties of goldfish that did not include blue. The best blues are produced from line breeding of good blue specimens of Shubunkins. Sometimes good blues may be obtained by breeding bronze with "pink" goldfish, but a grey slate colour may result instead. It may take several months for the nacreous coloration to develop on a young fry. Shubunkins are excellent pond fish because they reach a length of at adulthood. A Shubunkin goldfish is considered an adult at 1 to 2 years of age, even though they live much longer.
Genetics
Blue colouring in goldfish comes from black pigment within the body wall. It will not show as blue in fish with metallic type scales, but will look blue if the fish has matte or nacreous scales. The nacreous scale type is produced in a fish that carries the gene for metallic scales, as well as the gene for matte scales. Only nacreous scales are accepted by the Shubunkin breed standards.
When two fish with nacreous scales breed together, the offspring will on average include 1/4 with metallic scales, 1/4 with matte scales, and 1/2 with nacreous scales.
If a fish with nacreous scales breeds with a fish with metallic scales, the offspring will on average include 1/2 metallic and 1/2 nacreous.
If a fish with nacreous scales breeds with a fish with matte scales, the offspring will on average include 1/2 matte and 1/2 nacreous.
Variants
London Shubunkins have stout bodies and also short, rounded finnage that is similar to the common goldfish.
American Shubunkins' also called "Japanese Shubunkins" have a slimmer body shape than the london Shubunkin with deeply forked, pointed tail fins, and longer finnage all around. They are the mostly seen types of shubunkins and the most common kind of shubunkins in many fish stores and markets.
Bristol Shubunkins''' are somewhat of a long broad-bodied goldfish with well-developed finnage possessing a tail that is exaggeratingly large, moderately forked, and rounded at the end making a shape similar to that of a heart or the capitalization of the letter "B". They are the rarest shubunkins, hardly in stores, and are few alone in the US. The name, Bristol shubunkin, comes from the place, in Britain which they are bred from.