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#1
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I just rec'd a Dispar Anthias last Thursday. After hours of hiding out, she
finally comes out from time to time to swim around. My problem is with feeding her. I've tried mysis (which the pet store said she was eating there), seaweed, "Frozen Emerald Entree" which is zooplankton and a bunch of greens mixed up and I've tried flake food. She doesn't seem to care for any of them. I do see a dip inward in her belly but I can't help to think that maybe she's eating a little when I'm not looking because she is alive and acting "normal" after 4 days. I'd feel better if I could see her eat though. I've done some reading about this fish and understand that they can be a challenge to coax them to eat. Any of you have any luck or knowledge in this? Any ideas? My other fish don't bother the anthias at all. She swims around them peacefully. She is still a little skittish when I walk by the tank and hides for a good while after stick my hand in it. She seems to love being cleaned by my cleaner shrimp. In fact, after they did clean her initially, she pushes herself on them at all times to the point where they just ignore her and try to walk away after a while.. It's rather comical. I see her move around quickly like the other fish when I feed him. I see him swim up to a piece like she's going to bite, but doesn't. Overall, it seems like the Anthias is wanting to eat.... but just doesn't. I appreciate the time. B |
#2
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Bryan wrote:
I've tried mysis (which the pet store said she was eating there), seaweed, "Frozen Emerald Entree" which is zooplankton and a bunch of greens mixed up and I've tried flake food. Forget the flake food. Fenner states that these guys eat fine, meaty foods. In the wild, they take crustaceans, fish eggs, and larvae. He says that you may have to use live foods like live brine shrimp to get the fish started eating. They don't eat greens. Fenner says that brine shrimp isn't sufficient as a steady diet. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#3
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I dropped in some newly hatched brine this morning. Hard to tell if she was
eating or not since those critters are so small. Looked like she took a few gulps though. I'll watch and see. Speaking of hatching brine... should I put them in another aquarium to grow larger before feeding them? I know people hatch them and directly feed but it seems like the fish go nuts chasing dots around. Hardly seems worth the effort (although I'm no fish). ![]() Thanks for the help guys. I'll keep working on her. B "George Patterson" wrote in message news:bMDGg.21287$u1.6838@trnddc05... Bryan wrote: I've tried mysis (which the pet store said she was eating there), seaweed, "Frozen Emerald Entree" which is zooplankton and a bunch of greens mixed up and I've tried flake food. Forget the flake food. Fenner states that these guys eat fine, meaty foods. In the wild, they take crustaceans, fish eggs, and larvae. He says that you may have to use live foods like live brine shrimp to get the fish started eating. They don't eat greens. Fenner says that brine shrimp isn't sufficient as a steady diet. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#4
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#5
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Bryan wrote:
Speaking of hatching brine... should I put them in another aquarium to grow larger before feeding them? Couple of problems with that. First, what will you feed the brine shrimp to make them grow larger? Second, I've been told that they really need higher salinity than typical marine tanks if you want to raise them. The kicker for me is the fact that my latest book ("The Conscientious Aquarist") says that your fish can't stay alive on brine shrimp. It's to be used only as a transition food to get them started eating stuff like ground clam and shrimp. I would buy doses of live brine from an LFS and mix it with "real" food. I would quit feeding live brine as soon as it starts eating something else. As I said, Fenner says they eat a "fine, meaty" diet. I'll leave it to people like Wayne to further define that, but my guess is that some shrimp pulverized in a blender is a good candidate. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#6
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Thanks George.
I agree, I've read everywhere that brine isn't very nutritious, it just seems to add the "live" to feeding. It's also a pain in the ... compared to other types of feeding. I'm willing to use it to get new livestock to eat and even to keep the fish, ever so often, working for food. (It's also a bit entertaining for a few feeding moments.) So I'll leave it at that for the brine question. I'll work this anthias eating struggle until it's either eating like it should or the hermits have found a use for the fish.... oh that was bad I know.. ![]() Thanks for the help. Any other coaxing ideas are appreciated. B "George Patterson" wrote in message news:LINGg.21347$u1.15523@trnddc05... Bryan wrote: Speaking of hatching brine... should I put them in another aquarium to grow larger before feeding them? Couple of problems with that. First, what will you feed the brine shrimp to make them grow larger? Second, I've been told that they really need higher salinity than typical marine tanks if you want to raise them. The kicker for me is the fact that my latest book ("The Conscientious Aquarist") says that your fish can't stay alive on brine shrimp. It's to be used only as a transition food to get them started eating stuff like ground clam and shrimp. I would buy doses of live brine from an LFS and mix it with "real" food. I would quit feeding live brine as soon as it starts eating something else. As I said, Fenner says they eat a "fine, meaty" diet. I'll leave it to people like Wayne to further define that, but my guess is that some shrimp pulverized in a blender is a good candidate. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#8
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They are very hard to feed.
Some foods to try to feed (some more nutritious than others): brine shrimp, both live and frozen frozen mysis shrimp frozen reef plankton (new) made by sanfransisco bay brand Frozen cyclopes Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Bryan wrote on 8/22/2006 1:25 AM: I just rec'd a Dispar Anthias last Thursday. After hours of hiding out, she finally comes out from time to time to swim around. My problem is with feeding her. I've tried mysis (which the pet store said she was eating there), seaweed, "Frozen Emerald Entree" which is zooplankton and a bunch of greens mixed up and I've tried flake food. She doesn't seem to care for any of them. I do see a dip inward in her belly but I can't help to think that maybe she's eating a little when I'm not looking because she is alive and acting "normal" after 4 days. I'd feel better if I could see her eat though. I've done some reading about this fish and understand that they can be a challenge to coax them to eat. Any of you have any luck or knowledge in this? Any ideas? My other fish don't bother the anthias at all. She swims around them peacefully. She is still a little skittish when I walk by the tank and hides for a good while after stick my hand in it. She seems to love being cleaned by my cleaner shrimp. In fact, after they did clean her initially, she pushes herself on them at all times to the point where they just ignore her and try to walk away after a while.. It's rather comical. I see her move around quickly like the other fish when I feed him. I see him swim up to a piece like she's going to bite, but doesn't. Overall, it seems like the Anthias is wanting to eat.... but just doesn't. I appreciate the time. B |
#9
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They are very hard to feed.
Some foods to try to feed (some more nutritious than others): brine shrimp, both live and frozen frozen mysis shrimp frozen reef plankton (new) made by sanfransisco bay brand Frozen cyclopes Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Bryan wrote on 8/22/2006 1:25 AM: I just rec'd a Dispar Anthias last Thursday. After hours of hiding out, she finally comes out from time to time to swim around. My problem is with feeding her. I've tried mysis (which the pet store said she was eating there), seaweed, "Frozen Emerald Entree" which is zooplankton and a bunch of greens mixed up and I've tried flake food. She doesn't seem to care for any of them. I do see a dip inward in her belly but I can't help to think that maybe she's eating a little when I'm not looking because she is alive and acting "normal" after 4 days. I'd feel better if I could see her eat though. I've done some reading about this fish and understand that they can be a challenge to coax them to eat. Any of you have any luck or knowledge in this? Any ideas? My other fish don't bother the anthias at all. She swims around them peacefully. She is still a little skittish when I walk by the tank and hides for a good while after stick my hand in it. She seems to love being cleaned by my cleaner shrimp. In fact, after they did clean her initially, she pushes herself on them at all times to the point where they just ignore her and try to walk away after a while.. It's rather comical. I see her move around quickly like the other fish when I feed him. I see him swim up to a piece like she's going to bite, but doesn't. Overall, it seems like the Anthias is wanting to eat.... but just doesn't. I appreciate the time. B |
#10
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Good luck with your Dispar. I had a gorgeous Purple Queen that I fed
absolutely everything, to no avail. I thought at one point I'd found something it would eat, but I couldn't really be certain it wasn't just a "drive through and sniff it" reaction. I think it never did eat -- it expired after about a month. Some of the things I tried: any kind of flake or pelleted (even the tiny stuff) live brine frozen cube Cyclopeez pounded raw shrimp on a clip rinsed caviar pulverized and strained clams Mysis blackworms freeze-dried Tubifex jarred zooplankton Mine behaved just as you say yours is doing. Peaceful, didn't bother anybody nor did anybody bother it; didn't even seem terribly shy when we worked around or in the tank. Loved our cleaner shrimp. Came out and acted terribly interested when any food was being offered, and swam through the feeding frenzy with great excitement, but never actually snapped anything up. It didn't seem to recognize any offerings as food, although it evidently smelled it or in some way realized there was food around somewhere. All the other fish were beside themselves with joy at the cafeteria variety. Now I've got to feed all that stuff to them periodically or they sulk. I hope you find something your Anthias likes. I was heartbroken when mine finally died. I'll never have another one. The pictures I see of them in the wild are of big schools in wide open spaces. I think my little 120-gal just isn't the right environment for these beautiful animals. I'll enjoy the reefshots on TV and video, and leave them to their rightful place. Best of luck to you. And your Anthias. ~v~ On Tue, 22 Aug 2006 05:25:08 GMT, "Bryan" wrote: I just rec'd a Dispar Anthias last Thursday. After hours of hiding out, she finally comes out from time to time to swim around. My problem is with feeding her. I've tried mysis (which the pet store said she was eating there), seaweed, "Frozen Emerald Entree" which is zooplankton and a bunch of greens mixed up and I've tried flake food. She doesn't seem to care for any of them. I do see a dip inward in her belly but I can't help to think that maybe she's eating a little when I'm not looking because she is alive and acting "normal" after 4 days. I'd feel better if I could see her eat though. I've done some reading about this fish and understand that they can be a challenge to coax them to eat. Any of you have any luck or knowledge in this? Any ideas? My other fish don't bother the anthias at all. She swims around them peacefully. She is still a little skittish when I walk by the tank and hides for a good while after stick my hand in it. She seems to love being cleaned by my cleaner shrimp. In fact, after they did clean her initially, she pushes herself on them at all times to the point where they just ignore her and try to walk away after a while.. It's rather comical. I see her move around quickly like the other fish when I feed him. I see him swim up to a piece like she's going to bite, but doesn't. Overall, it seems like the Anthias is wanting to eat.... but just doesn't. I appreciate the time. B =^..^= .... the problem with people these days is that they've forgotten we're really just animals. |
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