FishHobby99
Fish Gatherer
interesting, but difficult for me with so many types of varying sizes. hard to control them coveting the neighbors’ eyes.I have always said " A fish will eat what you can put on the black bit of its eye each day"
interesting, but difficult for me with so many types of varying sizes. hard to control them coveting the neighbors’ eyes.I have always said " A fish will eat what you can put on the black bit of its eye each day"
Your cichlids will eat what you put in the tank, if one fish doesn't eat today don't worry it will be hungry enough tomorrow to eat. It is very hard to over feed a Cichlid tank.interesting, but difficult for me with so many types of varying sizes. hard to control them coveting the neighbors’ eyes.
Trust me it doesn't work, you just get so hungry that you eat twice as muchI need to try that (for myself )
Every other day, wow.
haven’t heard of that yet, but lots of stuff I don‘t know. I feed the dogs & cats twice a day too.
Makes sense to me!This has reminded me of something I don't think has yet been mentioned, and that involves the reason animals eat to begin with. It is to obtain energy to drive their respective physiology. Mammals like dogs and cats, and humans, along with birds, need to eat more per volume because much of the energy is used to keep the internal temperature at "x" degrees. Fish do not have this issue, as they are ectotherms and their internal temperature is governed by (and the same as) the temperature of the water they swim in and are constantly taking in via osmosis through every cell. There are reptiles (also ectotherms) that can manage with one meal in several days and even weeks.
Given the above, and when one considers that the fish in the aquarium require considerably less energy than would their wild counterparts because of other factors like not having to deal with escape from predators, etc, you have even less need for so much food.
I feed for about 2-3 minute a little at a time, making sure most is gobbled up before adding a little more. I assess whose eating, making sure my smaller fish who are less assertive during mealtime, get their share. I like small and micro pellets that float on top b/c food that floats down more quickly can be missed and increase waste. I crunch up a little flake food which also floats nicely. I started feeding them frozen brine shrimp too - defrosting for a few min beforehand and spooning small portions in at a time. So like, I divide the thawed cube into 4 or so separate additions. Mainly because it sink pretty fast.I continue to find feeding the correct amount of daily food a challenging task for a novice.
What exactly is a pinch? The guy who sold me ~20 fish, some relatively large, said 2 pinches twice a day. The guy who sold me a few guppies said the same thing. I see some saying all they can eat in a given period of time, usually 2-5 minutes. I would prefer something more precise, even if it meant using my gram sensitive scale for a while.
What do y‘all do?