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Feeding Copper Band Butterfly
Hi,
I bought a 4" copper band last week from a local store. However, we have feeding problem. I feed it with Misys shrimp, pellet, and blood warm, veggi, and even with clam. However it did not take any of those. I don't think it can survive for another week. To those who have successful experience in raising copper bank, what type of food you give to them? How do you train it to eat? Please advise. Thanks, Jon |
I have had a copper band for about two years and I have never seen it eat anything other then pods and aiptasia period. They are one of the harder fish to keep. Try hatching some brine shrimp its takes about three days they sell the hatch kits at jl. I have brought fish back from the dead with brine shrimp.
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Live clams from supermarket
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Bristle worms
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So, the frozen brine shrimps won't work, right? How do you hatch the brine shrimps? In a separated tank? |
Sorry
Reply to a wrong post.
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Live Clams
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I have tried the frozen clams. So, I guess the trick is the clams have to be alive. |
Bristle worms
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Thanks, Dino! How do I get some bristle worms? |
I had success with Blood worms & black worms.
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As we know, copper band is a slow eater, how do you give the worms to it and not taken by other fishes? I tend not to give excessive food to prevent from polluting water. |
Try live blackworms. I order them from Petland here. They order them on Tuesdays and the worms show up on Wednesdays.
Next time, make sure you see the fish eat before you buy it. Lots of Copperbands will eat - probably 75% of them. That doesn't mean they will survive long term though. It is unusual for them to survive long term. |
I use frozen plankton and don't find to many fish can resist it
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I don't have experience with CBB but have trained a lot of so call "difficult" fish. A quiet, stable, and familiar environment is more important than the type of food. It takes longer time for some fish than others.
Also 4" is a big for CBB. Big fish is already fixed on certain foods and hard to train on new foods. Good luck. |
Keep at it! I trained both a copperband and a mandarin goby to accept frozen and both are really hard to train.
Use brine shrimp, they seem to be the food most will take first. Turn off all pumps and get the water to stop moving then using a turkey baster or pipette squirt a little infront of the fish. Maybe have it land on some rock so they can pick at it. Some fish don't like food in the water column and prefer to pick off rock (thus the copperbands big snout). Once they recognize frozen brine as a food source they'll probably start taking from the water when you do regular feeding. My mandarin actually hides in a spot each time I feed and I puff some food in the little rock cave just for him. |
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