AbbeysDad
Fish Gatherer
Food for thought....
A long time ago I researched fish foods. In the old days, diehard hobbyists raised and fed a lot of live foods because commercial fish foods just didn't provide adequate nutrition for best health and breeding. This is not really as true today, but buyer beware...
A close look at the ingredient list will reveal that a lot of fish foods are primarily grains (listed first) like wheat, oat, rice flour and/or gluten followed by fishmeal.
Now fishmeal is the ground, processed, and dried result of various lower quality fish catches and cannery waste. It is produced and preservatives are added and it's stored in warehouses (sometimes for months) until a fish food manufacturer orders it. Because it's dry powdered, grains must be used as the protein binder to make the fish food. The trouble is that fish can't really digest/process grains, so it passes right through as waste.
This is not unlike other lower quality pet foods that use grains as filler in their primary ingredient list.
The higher quality fish foods will use fresh fish (salmon, cod, herring, krill...) as the primary ingredients. Fish that are fed these foods produce far less waste and may likely be healthier over time.
So are all fish foods that list grains as the primary ingredient followed by fishmeal bad? Well that's debatable, especially with the various vitamin and mineral concoctions nowadays. However, I tend to think that a more natural diet is best and fish in the wild don't eat grains.
Ref:
Almost Natural
Omega One
Disclaimer: Like most of you, I'm just a tropical fish hobbyist and have no affiliation with any fish food manufacturer,
A long time ago I researched fish foods. In the old days, diehard hobbyists raised and fed a lot of live foods because commercial fish foods just didn't provide adequate nutrition for best health and breeding. This is not really as true today, but buyer beware...
A close look at the ingredient list will reveal that a lot of fish foods are primarily grains (listed first) like wheat, oat, rice flour and/or gluten followed by fishmeal.
Now fishmeal is the ground, processed, and dried result of various lower quality fish catches and cannery waste. It is produced and preservatives are added and it's stored in warehouses (sometimes for months) until a fish food manufacturer orders it. Because it's dry powdered, grains must be used as the protein binder to make the fish food. The trouble is that fish can't really digest/process grains, so it passes right through as waste.
This is not unlike other lower quality pet foods that use grains as filler in their primary ingredient list.
The higher quality fish foods will use fresh fish (salmon, cod, herring, krill...) as the primary ingredients. Fish that are fed these foods produce far less waste and may likely be healthier over time.
So are all fish foods that list grains as the primary ingredient followed by fishmeal bad? Well that's debatable, especially with the various vitamin and mineral concoctions nowadays. However, I tend to think that a more natural diet is best and fish in the wild don't eat grains.
Ref:
Almost Natural
Omega One
Disclaimer: Like most of you, I'm just a tropical fish hobbyist and have no affiliation with any fish food manufacturer,
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