When the strain of fish as a whole (not talking about color or specialty morphs) starts looking considerably different than wild ones then you know theres something wrong with them.
It tells me there's genetic variation in the pool. In terms of evolutionary biology, define "defect" and "deformity" and "weakness." ALL traits of all living things arise as mutations. Preferring trait X to trait Y is a matter of aesthetics. Why is a fish that isn't shaped like a submarine (or rolling pin, or whichever standard we've all agreed on) "defective" or suffering from some "weakness"? Again, I haven't seen ANY pics of 10" wild JDs. Do we know there's no variation in that gene pool?
If you trace the line of scales that runs along the lateral line, you'll almost always see it dive, snapped like a pencil, right about where the anal fin starts. Go back even on this very thread and every large dempsey you see is cracked in half. It's probably just the inbreeding - this has been a staple species in our hobby for almost 100 years! That's a lot of sister-brother matings going on!
but I think fish like our lfs dempseys with the curved bodies would be lunch for other fish in the wild imo.
I don't see how the spine curvature would give this fish any advantage in the wild.


How does it help angels, discus, severum? Not every genetic trait necessarily improves or kills an animal.