Bighead carp

Hypophthalmichthys nobilis

Also known as: Noble fish, Yong yu, Speckled silver carp

Plan a system with Bighead carp

Quick facts

Adult size
120 cm, 40000 g typical harvest weight
Days to harvest
540 to 1095 days from fingerling
Lifespan (max)
up to 20 years
Diet
omnivore
Temperature class
warm-water
Difficulty
beginner

Water parameters

Temperature range
630°C (optimum 23°C)
pH
6.5 to 9
Hardness
5 to 30 dGH
Minimum tank
4000 L per individual at harvest size

Feed and growth

Feed protein
25% target
Daily feed (warm water)
2.50% of body weight per day
Daily feed (cool water)
0.70% of body weight per day
Max stocking density
40 g per litre of system water

A 40000g adult eats about 1000.0 g of feed per day at optimum temperature. For a roster of 10 fish at adult size, that's around 10000 g of feed daily.

Legality

Aquaculture and possession rules vary by jurisdiction and change over time. This table reflects regulations as of the verified date on each row. Verify with your local fisheries or wildlife authority before stocking.

Jurisdiction Status Notes
United States (federal) restricted Lacey Act injurious species; live transport across state lines restricted verified 2026-05-13
California prohibited verified 2026-05-13
Michigan prohibited verified 2026-05-13
Wisconsin prohibited verified 2026-05-13
European Union (bloc) check local regulations verified 2026-05-13
New South Wales prohibited verified 2026-05-13

Jurisdictions not listed here default to "check local regulations". A non-listing is not a green light; rules in your specific county or municipality may apply.

Habitat and origin

Native to the large river systems of eastern China, from the Pearl River in the south to the Amur River in the north. The species (Hypophthalmichthys nobilis) is a filter-feeding carp that strains zooplankton and large phytoplankton from the water column using specialized gill rakers. Together with silver carp (which filters smaller phytoplankton), bighead carp forms the foundation of traditional Chinese polyculture systems that have sustained fish production for over a thousand years. Global production exceeds 3 million tonnes annually, almost entirely in China. Bighead carp has been introduced to over 70 countries for aquaculture and biological water quality management. In the United States, escaped bighead carp (along with silver carp, grass carp, and black carp, collectively called 'Asian carp') have become one of the most damaging invasive species in the Mississippi River system, outcompeting native filter-feeding fish and disrupting food webs.

Climate and outdoor ponds

Climate classification
temperate (handles seasonal swings)
Outdoor pond zones (USDA)
5 to 12 (winter low around -29°C or warmer)
Heating in a temperate climate
Not required (handles seasonal cool periods)
Cooling in a temperate climate
Not required

Zone bounds reflect year-round outdoor pond viability with no active heating. Anywhere outside the bounded zone, the species can still be kept in an indoor heated tank or a seasonally-managed system. Verify your specific microclimate, as a sheltered yard zone can run a half-zone warmer than the regional rating.

Care notes

A filter-feeding species that cannot eat pelleted feed. Bighead carp sustain themselves by straining zooplankton and suspended organic particles from the water column, which means they must be grown in systems that produce enough natural plankton: fertilized ponds, lakes, or very large, nutrient-rich water bodies. This makes them poorly suited to typical aquaponics setups where the goal is clean, filtered water with low suspended solids. In traditional Chinese polyculture, bighead carp occupy the zooplankton-feeding niche alongside silver carp (phytoplankton), grass carp (macrophyte vegetation), common carp (benthic detritus), and often tilapia or catfish. Growth in productive water is fast: 13 kg in 12-18 months. Temperature range is 1530°C, optimal at 2528°C. In the US, bighead carp culture is heavily regulated or prohibited in most states due to the catastrophic invasive species situation in the Mississippi basin. Federal legislation and the Asian Carp Regional Coordinating Committee actively work to prevent their spread into the Great Lakes. Where legal and ecologically appropriate (primarily China and Southeast Asia), they're a high-volume, low-input protein source. Not recommended for aquaponics in any jurisdiction with invasive carp regulations.

Plan a system with Bighead carp

Verified against: fao-fisheries-aquaculture. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.

Further reading