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#1
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Hi,
I have 4 SAE's in the tank. they're all very active and healthy, but they are such hogs, they're starting to look like they're carrying small balloons in their belly (meaning, very fat.. sort of a fish-version of waddling). I've tried reducing food.. then they're so fast ,they'll eat all the other fish's share and other fish ended up starving. also, when I reduce food, they start eating my Amazon sword and Java ferns, so they start looking like strings (only the hard veins are left on the Amazons, and the ferns are nibbled to the stump) so.. to protect the plant, I end up giving the more food, and they continue to get fat. I dont' knwo what to do. I know it's unhealthy, but if I don't feed them enough, they starve the other fish and eat all the plants while they continue to get fat. also, they're starting to harass other smaller fish (chain loachs) and I'm afraid they're going to end up as their snack someday... any thoughts? may be I should trade in 2 out of the 4 with some other not-so-voracious fish? linda |
#2
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On Fri, 25 Feb 2005, LM wrote:
I have 4 SAE's in the tank. they're all very active and healthy, but they are such hogs Well, you need to used to the fact they eat a lot and eat fast, but you can certainly find ways to control this without resorting to giving them back to LFS. I own SAEs and clown loaches along with a couple of more timid fish. Both species eat till they're round like pigs and sink like rocks - and both are damn fast. To keep them from eating way too much, but make other fish happy, I do three things: 1) I feed when fast feeders are less active. Late afternoon, when lights are out, clown loaches and SAEs are often dozing and fail to notice food; many other species (plecos, barbs) are very much awake and happily dine on whatever I put in the tank. 2) I feed long-lasting foods that take hours to get done with. Frozen green peas are a great example. Even though fast fish are there first, others get a chance to grab just as much. There are some foods that SAEs have hard time dealing with at all, but that pose no problem to other species. It depends on who you have in your tank, but my panaque plecos can cope with a whole raw carrot quite efficiently, whereas SAEs can't. 3) I use combined simulatenous feeding. I put SAE's favourite snacks along with foods they like less. After a relatively small but favored snack, clown loaches and SAEs are somewhat less likely to go after something they find less tasty. Althought it might be a challenge to find something SAEs do not go bonkers about, it is most certainly possible (Sera Vipachips work for me). -- ------------------------- bash$ ![]() Michal Zalewski * [http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx] Did you know that clones never use mirrors? --------------------------- 2005-02-26 00:50 -- http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/photo/current/ |
#3
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Fat as in "gosh that's a big belly after you've eaten" or fat
as in "you aren't supposed to have that shape" ? Keep in mind SAE's get pretty big. They eat a lot. -- Need Mercedes parts ? - http://parts.mbz.org http://www.mbz.org | Mercedes Mailing lists: http://lists.mbz.org 633CSi 250SE/C 300SD | Killies, killi.net, Crypts, aquaria.net 1970 280SE, 72 280SE | Old wris****ches http://watches.list.mbz.org |
#4
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#5
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![]() "Richard Sexton" wrote in message ... Fat as in "gosh that's a big belly after you've eaten" or fat as in "you aren't supposed to have that shape" ? Keep in mind SAE's get pretty big. They eat a lot. I'm happy when mine take on a torpedo shape - a slight stomach bulge. I've seen some thin SAE's in my travels around LFSs and in fact, my 4 were almost anorexic when I bought them. Different story now - they discovered the algae disks this morning and pigged out - a lesson there - half a tab for all 4, so they graze on what they are supposed to later in the day - algae ![]() Oz -- My Aquatic web Blog is at http://members.optusnet.com.au/ivan.smith |
#6
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"Michal Zalewski" wrote in message
news:Pine.LNX.4.58.0502260050070.30219@dione... On Fri, 25 Feb 2005, LM wrote: I have 4 SAE's in the tank. they're all very active and healthy, but they are such hogs Well, you need to used to the fact they eat a lot and eat fast, but you can certainly find ways to control this without resorting to giving them back to LFS. I own SAEs and clown loaches along with a couple of more timid fish. Both species eat till they're round like pigs and sink like rocks - and both are damn fast. To keep them from eating way too much, but make other fish happy, I do three things: 1) I feed when fast feeders are less active. Late afternoon, when lights are out, clown loaches and SAEs are often dozing and fail to notice food; many other species (plecos, barbs) are very much awake and happily dine on whatever I put in the tank. 2) I feed long-lasting foods that take hours to get done with. Frozen green peas are a great example. Even though fast fish are there first, others get a chance to grab just as much. There are some foods that SAEs have hard time dealing with at all, but that pose no problem to other species. It depends on who you have in your tank, but my panaque plecos can cope with a whole raw carrot quite efficiently, whereas SAEs can't. 3) I use combined simulatenous feeding. I put SAE's favourite snacks along with foods they like less. After a relatively small but favored snack, clown loaches and SAEs are somewhat less likely to go after something they find less tasty. Althought it might be a challenge to find something SAEs do not go bonkers about, it is most certainly possible (Sera Vipachips work for me). -- ------------------------- bash$ ![]() Michal Zalewski Some really excellent ideas there Michal. I wonder if linda could post some pics. SAEs are riverine fish, so an area of the tank with higher turbulence might give them some much needed exercise. Varying the size of the food can help too (small fish concentrate on smaller pieces, while fat fish don't bother). Getting them to fight over an algae wafer in a back corner can sometimes be a good diversion to the real feeding going on in the front. An example of diet food is cucumber, which is mostly water. Ultimately you might need to reset the tank, and move the SAEs into a larger tank with larger and equally aggressive eaters so that you can tone down this current tank. -- www.NetMax.tk |
#7
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On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 12:27:53 -0800, "LM" wrote:
Hi, I have 4 SAE's in the tank. they're all very active and healthy, but they are such hogs, they're starting to look like they're carrying small balloons in their belly (meaning, very fat.. sort of a fish-version of waddling). I've tried reducing food.. then they're so fast ,they'll eat all the other fish's share and other fish ended up starving. also, when I reduce food, they start eating my Amazon sword and Java ferns, so they start looking like strings (only the hard veins are left on the Amazons, and the ferns are nibbled to the stump) so.. to protect the plant, I end up giving the more food, and they continue to get fat. I dont' knwo what to do. I know it's unhealthy, but if I don't feed them enough, they starve the other fish and eat all the plants while they continue to get fat. also, they're starting to harass other smaller fish (chain loachs) and I'm afraid they're going to end up as their snack someday... any thoughts? may be I should trade in 2 out of the 4 with some other not-so-voracious fish? linda Hi Linda, I have 8 SAEs in a 75 gallon community tank which includes 3 Plecos and 6 Clown Loaches. I also have 3 SAEs in a 29 gallon community tank and 1 SAE in a 10 gallon community tank. I feed all my fish flake food. After almost 2 years only problem happened when I tried cutting back on the food by going from 2 feedings a day to one. I noticed by annubias leaves were getting lacy. I went back to feeding twice and the plants are recovering. I am pretty sure the SAEs were doing it. My 12 SAEs are about 3 inches. I can't say their stomachs ballon, but definitely are full. I use air in all my tanks, the flake food disperses quickly. I put in large helpings so food is available throughout the tank rather quickly. All the fishes, large and small get a pretty good shot. In the 75 gallon some of the smaller fish stay away from the heavy food concentration and wait for the current to bring food to them. dick |
#8
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Hi All,
thanks for all the replies.. seems like I'm just bound to keep them "fat" and not worry... (altho one of my lace gouramis are getting abit pot-bellied too... hmmm) at least it's nice to know it's hard to over-feed the tank with SAE's on the loose. I'll try to take a photo of them to see if they look unhealthily chubby. 2 of the 4 looks like a shark profile (if you know what I mean), but the other 2 looks like they swallowed a small rugby ball in their bellies.. definitely a noticable potbelly. (as in "fat bellies" and not "cancerous growth bellies") Hopefully they'll be ok.. I thought they were only supposed to grow to 4in? currently they are about 4in long from tip of their nose to the base of their tailfins. are they going to get larger?? Now I'm worried if I have overstocked my planted 37G tank: 4 SAE 4 pearl gouramis (t. leeri) 4 zebra loaches (b. striata) 3 chain/dwarf loaches (b. sidthemunkis) ? otocincluses (more than 3, less than 7...) 2 danios (both 2+ yr old, so they're getting old... don't intend to replace them after they go to fish heaven) my worry is that I started out with 3 young dwarf loaches (sidthemunkis) that are about 1in long.. but now I can only see 2 at any given time. not sure if the third one is hiding somewhere in the sword plant bush, or became midnight SAE snack... linda |
#9
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Hi Netmax,
I'll try to post a photo. as for turbulence, i have two powerhead 200's churning the UGF and HOT Magnum filter on the 37G.. it's pretty turbulent in there without blowing fish around too much :-) I bouthg tand meant to use the HOT filter as a temporary cleaning filter, but got lazy and just left it on the tank one day, and it's been there since :-) it's just full of fiberous filter material that gets cleaned every several months when it gets clogged so bad the flow becomes noticably slower. recently SAE's been harassing eachother.. may be the tank is getting small for them? hmm... I wrote this in the other reply, but just to reiterate what I have in the tank now: 4 SAEs 4 pearl gouramis (t. leeri) 4 zebra loaches (b. striata) 3 chain/dwarf loaches (b. sidthemunkis) ? otocincluses (more than 3, less than 7... they keep hiding so it's hard to tell) 2 danios (both 2+ yr old, so they're getting old... don't intend to replace them after they go to fish heaven) 3 Amazon sword (BIG.. about 15in tall and bushy) 1 anubias (getting big too.. sprawling across an 8-in driftwood) bunch of java ferns (dense foliage...) bunch of stem plants (looking stringy due to SAE damage..) linda Some really excellent ideas there Michal. I wonder if linda could post some pics. SAEs are riverine fish, so an area of the tank with higher turbulence might give them some much needed exercise. Varying the size of the food can help too (small fish concentrate on smaller pieces, while fat fish don't bother). Getting them to fight over an algae wafer in a back corner can sometimes be a good diversion to the real feeding going on in the front. An example of diet food is cucumber, which is mostly water. Ultimately you might need to reset the tank, and move the SAEs into a larger tank with larger and equally aggressive eaters so that you can tone down this current tank. -- www.NetMax.tk |
#10
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Thusly "LM" Spake Unto All:
I'll try to post a photo. You'll find that difficult in this group. However for comparison, these SAE's: http://www.andras.net/images/siamese_algae_eater_6.jpg http://www.aquabotanic.com/images/SAE2.gif aren't fat. recently SAE's been harassing eachother.. may be the tank is getting small for them? hmm... No, they often do that. SAE's are said to be peaceful and social, and compared to chinese algae eaters they are, but it's still a truth with considerable modification - quarrelling and chasing are normal activities of SAE's. Some individuals can be *very* aggressive against conspecifics. No harm will come of it, provided you have tight-fitting lid (otherwise you'll start finding SAE's on the carpet, as they tend to jump when chased). If it gets annoying, with constant round-the-clock chasing, buying more of them may help diffuse aggression. Alternatively, if you have one of those excessively aggressive individuals, removing it might not be a bad idea. |
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