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High quality cichlid pellets

gwand

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The Seriously Fish site states that I should feed my cichlids a high quality cichlid pellet, as well as live critters, such as blood worms, brine shrimp etc. I don’t actually have the cichlids yet, but I am preparing for their new home. My question is, what is a high quality Cichlid pellet brand? Any recommendations? Thank you.
 
I haven't had any for a long time ago, but when I did, I fed Hikari Cichlid Gold ( was supposed to be the "gold" standard... my Large Pacu continued to lose his reds as he got bigger, ( until I got him on carrots )... and I'm sure in 20 years, there are many others available now... I would think that feeding them, like your other "water babies", as much variety as you can get them to eat would be the "best"
 
Both will want a mix of fiber via plant matter and protein. I had a mix of spirulina and such with black soldier fly larvae, but in a flake. That to me is better for those fish, especially the Pelvicachromis. I've never been impressed with the pellet format for dwarf cichlids.
 
Anomalochromis thomasi and Pelvicachromis subocellatus.
If they are wild caught they won't touch pellet foods. Captive bred might but any cichlid pellet or flake, add some vegetable flakes, and after feeding dry food, give them some frozen (but defrosted) foods like brineshrimp, bloodworms, prawn, etc.
 
Fluval has a bottom feader bug bite which is a mix of greens (peas and similar) and soldier fly. I've not had any issues feeding dry food to wc fishes including cherry chocolate gourami (which i was amazed when they went after dry food immediately). Having said that sometime it can take a while. The fish that is giving me the most problems are my wc discus as they seem to only want (freeze dried) blackworms; i can't really get them to eat much else even though i'm trying to get them to eat more greens.
 
In strictly anatomical terms, there are differences between Anomalochromis and Rubricatochromis, the jewel Cichlids. In behavioural terms, I see thomasi as the quietest jewel. They are far less aggressive, but they can be trouble. A pair aren't great. A group squabbles, and that keeps them happy. But they tend not to be shy. They like their food, and they'll eat anything.

P subocellatus are very different. They want their caves and shadows, and they sometimes look like they aren't eating. A lot are killed by overfeeding, as a result. They're snackers and savourers of their food. They aren't scavengers, but you could make the argument.

Both, to me, are better with flakes than pellets.

If you look at pellet sizes, most stores tend to medium and large ones. Tiny pellets can be hard to find. I think that's because pellets are made for larger fish. Cichlid pellets are rarely formulated for the small species. A big fish will drag the food over its throat teeth, spit it out and work it over. Smaller fish can be more cautious.

When the business thinks Cichlid, it means Malawis, Discus, severum, and the like. I have some tiny sinking shrimp pellets. When I feed them to my Parananochromis, both wild caught and F-1, they don't eat them til they have turned to mush and started to fall apart. They're quality food, but very unappealing. Flake starts out interesting, though I do feed a lot of artemia, white worms, daphnia and mosquito larvae.

You can put bug bites pellets in an old coffee grinder or go with a mortar and pestle, and have great food for small fish there.
 

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