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03/28/2008, 07:58 AM | #101 | |
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Re: Unintentional live feeding
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03/28/2008, 08:05 AM | #102 | |
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Thanks in advance. |
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03/28/2008, 08:18 AM | #103 | |
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03/28/2008, 08:24 AM | #104 | |
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Thanks in advance. |
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03/28/2008, 09:04 AM | #105 | |
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03/28/2008, 09:30 AM | #106 | |
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03/28/2008, 10:01 AM | #107 | |
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Thanks. |
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03/28/2008, 10:15 AM | #108 | |
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Not for the faint of heart... http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/fo...olonial+hilton |
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03/28/2008, 10:20 AM | #109 | |
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Thanks |
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03/31/2008, 08:56 AM | #110 | |
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03/31/2008, 04:26 PM | #111 |
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Wow, that's a bunch of questions since my absence, I hope to answer them all.
HUFA = Highly Unsaturated Fatty Acids. Glass and Ghost shrimp are usually the same being that is a common name and not the species name. Gut loading is when you take a live food item such as the glass shrimp (which have no real nutritional value) and allow them to stuff themselves eating as much of a good food source as possible and then feeding them to your livestock. DT's is a brand of phytoplankton that is a valuable for many of the creatures we keep. I'm not sure about crawfish, I'd rather stick to shellfish or clams from the seafood deli to ensure the proper nutrients and not adding saturated fats as with fresh water fish. Saturated fats cannot be digested properly by marine fish.
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When you find yourself in "Deep Water" it's best to keep your mouth shut! Current Tank Info: 65RR Cube Mixed Reef |
08/15/2008, 02:12 PM | #112 |
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I live in Florida and one of the best things for my tank has been live bait. You can usually buy 5 dozen live shrimp for $4 or so and then freeze what you don't feed immediately. My fish also enjoy cut frozen squid and pretty much anything else I put in there. I have a lionfish, lunare wrasse, six line soapfish, and snowflake moray eel and they all eat all of these plus formuala one and other prepared frozen foods.
Oh yeah, and any crabs or snails I try to add to the tank also. |
10/03/2008, 05:34 AM | #113 |
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I also have a Fuzzy Dwraf Lionfish. I have been feeding him live freshwater feeded fish about 3x a week. I tried the fish flesh on a feeding stick without success. Now he won't even look @ the live fish. Any suggestions or comments?
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10/03/2008, 05:42 AM | #114 |
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I also have a DFL that only would eat freshwater feeder fish. He has been eating them 3x a week for about a month. Now when offered them he will not even look at them. I also tried the fresh fish on a stick idea with no avail. Any suggestions or help would be appreciater.
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10/03/2008, 05:08 PM | #115 |
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Squid and Octopus are not highly recommended because of the oily content in thier flesh that will decrease your skimmers efficiency. There are many other foods available that will equal or exceed their nutritional levels.
alanbetty, I highly recommend you read this topic from the first page on; you'll read how bad fresh water species are for saltwater fish. I'd let them settle for a minimum of three days before attempting to feed anything.
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When you find yourself in "Deep Water" it's best to keep your mouth shut! Current Tank Info: 65RR Cube Mixed Reef |
10/14/2008, 10:42 AM | #116 |
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good luck
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10/18/2008, 05:47 PM | #117 |
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great article thanks
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07/28/2009, 07:18 AM | #118 |
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i haven't predators for the present what kinds of would you advice me to get
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07/28/2009, 09:18 AM | #119 |
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I wouldn't advise anyone without details on the system to be used and the hobbyist's experience.
There are certainly too many "predators" in all classes of the hobby to generalize without details. Smaller systems can support Pseudochromis, Leaf Fish and Frogfish as an example, but very large systems are needed for Sharks, Snappers, Groupers and Pilot Jacks.
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When you find yourself in "Deep Water" it's best to keep your mouth shut! Current Tank Info: 65RR Cube Mixed Reef |
07/29/2009, 07:10 PM | #120 |
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very interesting thread!
i too live in florida and am an avid fishermen(i know hurting fish - bad). I often cast net live bait such as pilchard, mullet, mojhara, pinfish, grunt, etc. As well as catch blue crab. Would there be anything negative about using any of the above live/frozen as feeders. My main concern is parasites from fresh or live food items, but would this risk be eliminated if i freeze everything prior to feeding? Also what about left over scraps from the fillet table? |
07/30/2009, 06:20 AM | #121 |
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If you're the one doing the filleting, then sure. Just be sure it wasn't something sitting in the sun all day, fresh is best.
If parasites are a concern and the fish will accept frozen (prepared foods) then that's the way to go. Otherwise you can go with a "FreshWater" dip before using the live.
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When you find yourself in "Deep Water" it's best to keep your mouth shut! Current Tank Info: 65RR Cube Mixed Reef |
07/30/2009, 11:44 AM | #122 |
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i would be doing the filleting, i dont like wasting any thing. i often feed my mantis shrimp fish scraps and rib meat. i figured it would be safe for the fish, just wanted a second opinion.
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08/15/2009, 09:04 PM | #123 |
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I've had my juvenile Zebra Lion for just over a week now. She won't eat. I've tried krill (which I heard can cause lockjaw after the fact), mysis, blood worms, brine shrimp, oyster & silversides, including whole, half, & just the heads rolled in garlic. Tonight I even tried a Golden Barb (FW fish that swims near the bottom of the tank.)
The 1st night it seemed to go after 1 piece of mysis, which I know is nowhere near enough to fill her up. She started moving around & acted like she was stalking when I tried the oyster, but she was stalking a different part of the tank. Tonight I added the Barb & it swam right at the bottom in the current of the powerhead just below where the lion was perched. The lion swam off, came back, then went away again. I filled a 5g bucket with SW from the tank, added the lion, then added the FW fish again. It paid NO interest to it. Again it seemed to stalk/attack but it was towards open water. I'm going to say the body is about .5-.75" wide & the head is about twice as wide. I'm waiting for the ghost shrimp to come in so I can try those. I know a week isn't very long, but I don't know when the fish last ate & I don't want it to starve. |
08/16/2009, 06:52 AM | #124 |
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Juveniles can be very hard to start and the glass shrimp (gut loaded) are best to use; krill are okay once the fish begin to take prepared foods as long as you soak them in a vitamin supplement first.
Observing the body is how to determine health/need to to eat. Juvies are naturally thin, but if the abdominal region looks pinched, then it is imperative they eat. Be careful that in your attempts you don't add so much food to the water column that it becomes waste and fouls the water. Lions are not true aggressive predators, they're ambush predators on prey small enough to fit in its mouth. If you have boisterous tankmates, it may keep the lion from feeding. Placing the lion in a bucket is also very stressful and will not help either.
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When you find yourself in "Deep Water" it's best to keep your mouth shut! Current Tank Info: 65RR Cube Mixed Reef |
08/16/2009, 10:12 AM | #125 |
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So it is okay to feed krill? I heard it could cause lockjaw.
Most of the uneaten food gets pulled out or the Nass snails get it. It's the only fish in a 55g (soon to be 75g.) I'm not adding anything else until it's eating & I know it's healthy. |
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