feeding live food

buddy25

New Member
I was wanting to know if it is ok to feed my two clowns live food. I have seen live shrimp growing kits and was wanting to know if it would be safe to do.
 

incysor

New Member
It's fine to feed live food, but normal live brine, is about as nutritious for the clowns, as popcorn is for us. They're great for getting finicky fish to eat, and if you add selcon to the live brine for about a half hour before feeding them to the tank, it'll add some fatty acids that the fish need. You don't want to rely on them as your main food source though, because as stated they're not very nutritious, and lots of them will escape, and die in the system. Over time it's likely to throw your parameters out of whack.

B
 

incysor

New Member
Yes, you're absolutely right. Baby brine with the yolk sac still attached are nutritious. But most people that feed live are feeding adult brine.

Where did you get the baby brine from, and how much of a pain is it to hatch them? I think you posted the info before, but I don't have time to look it up right now.

B
 

dragon79

New Member
incysor said:
Yes, you're absolutely right. Baby brine with the yolk sac still attached are nutritious. But most people that feed live are feeding adult brine.

Where did you get the baby brine from, and how much of a pain is it to hatch them? I think you posted the info before, but I don't have time to look it up right now.

B
it's probably buried under general forum somewhere, but, I bought that one black dish from the brine shrimp website. (www.brineshrimpdirect.com)

Not a pain or anything. You fill the dish with tank water or you can use regular saltwater (but I have more hatching with tank water) , then put it in a place where it stays warm, and where there is low light. when they hatch, which is like 24 hours, they'll swim to the middle where they see the light source and swim around there. You scoop them up with the scooper they include and transfer to your tank, then it's lunch time! (be sure to turn off your pumps so the guys dont get sucked away or skimmed away.
 

Abarnswell

New Member
I just bought some DT's Live Marine Phytoplankton. Had it delivered overnight from CA in a fridge pack (it has to stay cold). I'll feed it to my feather dusters and other filter feeding guys, as soon as I have some. I'm just in day 3 of my cycling period right now.... and waiting oh, so patiently...
 

djconn

New Member
DT's is good stuff. I'm currently working with them to renew their sponsorship here at Nanotank.

Please mention you heard about them through our site when you order or speak with them.
 

incysor

New Member
I wouldn't feed DT's while you're cycling. It's very rich food. The mini dusters on the rock will be fine without it, and it's likely to cause an algae bloom this early.

B
 

Abarnswell

New Member
incysor said:
Yes, you're absolutely right. Baby brine with the yolk sac still attached are nutritious.
I'm going to start hatching baby brine shrimp pretty soon, for dwarf seahorses, as that's pretty much the only thing they eat. It's good to decap the shrimp eggs (cysts) before you hatch them. They're eaiser to eat and digest for the fish, and there is far less waste in the water afterward. It's easy to decapp them. Takes about 7 minutes. I'll need to do that for the dwarf seahorses. If anyone needs to know how, just let me know. It involved soaking them in a bleach solution for a few minutes before you put them in the container to hatch them.
 

dragon79

New Member
Abarnswell said:
incysor said:
Yes, you're absolutely right. Baby brine with the yolk sac still attached are nutritious.
I'm going to start hatching baby brine shrimp pretty soon, for dwarf seahorses, as that's pretty much the only thing they eat. It's good to decap the shrimp eggs (cysts) before you hatch them. They're eaiser to eat and digest for the fish, and there is far less waste in the water afterward. It's easy to decapp them. Takes about 7 minutes. I'll need to do that for the dwarf seahorses. If anyone needs to know how, just let me know. It involved soaking them in a bleach solution for a few minutes before you put them in the container to hatch them.
too much work :p For the lazy like me, I went and bought the dish where, when they hatch, they all swim to the middle where the hole is and where light hits it. Then, they are attracted to it. With all of them swimming in the middle, you just scoop them all and put them in your tank, and all you get is 100% live baby brine, no shells, no mess.
 
Top