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Old 01-21-2011, 02:26 PM
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Default Dosing PODS?

So, wondering. Does anyone regularly add PODS to their tanks... or live planktons?

Wondering if they just become food or if they will actually become a breeding population.

I have a small refugium, and have considered adding a Bag of live pods here and there, but don't want it to be a single feeding for my fish.
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Old 01-21-2011, 02:52 PM
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I've added Copepods to my tank on a number of occasions. My Mandarin is by far the most expensive fish that I have ever owned. Although he is fat now and its been six months since the last time I added any.

Tiggerpods will amount to a single feeding. I personally wouldnt waste my money here. You need to find a good source for the right type of pods. You'll need to do some research to avoid wasting money.

- Brad
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Old 01-21-2011, 04:08 PM
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no need to buy copepods. For a mandarin, fish roe (masago) and live white worms are doing wonders. Mine eats fish roe, Hikari frozen bloodworms and live white worms. They are fat as can be.
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Old 01-21-2011, 04:44 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Coleus View Post
I think you can just buy a live rock from some one who has lots of pods and put it in your refugium. Feed them and they will grow fast.
I do have PODs in my system... but I want to ensure always a healthy level. What/how do you feed PODs specifically?

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Originally Posted by daniella3d View Post
no need to buy copepods. For a mandarin, fish roe (masago) and live white worms are doing wonders. Mine eats fish roe, Hikari frozen bloodworms and live white worms. They are fat as can be.

I do not have a Mandarin. I may get one in the future. Just, as mentioned above, want to ensure I maintain a healthy population.
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My 70 Gallon build:

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http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=72762



I wonder... does anyone care enough to read signatures if you make them really small? I would not. I would probably moan and complain, read three words and swear once or twice. But since you made it this far, please rate my builds.
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Old 01-21-2011, 06:07 PM
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I have added live cultures to the tank before, really no noticeable effects. Personally I think you get a much better variety of pods & plankton from liverock and new coral purchases. It's a shame that a quick Iodine bath kills most of this life but it's usually for the best.
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Old 01-21-2011, 07:05 PM
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My trick has always been to make a rubble pile somewhere in my tank where detritus naturally builds up and where my fish can't get at my pods. My rubble pile is actually underneath all of my rock in the very back of the tank where it is almost impossible to see. I seeded the tank with some pod-heavy rocks and fed some food to the rubble pile for the first couple of weeks but now just let the detritus do the work for me. It is a POD FACTORY. My mandarin has learned to hang out at the pile at certain times of the day when there is an apparent changing of the guards to to speak... it's like the pods work shifts. Weird.

I also use a CPR bakpak skimmer with the biobale removed. The skimmer acts both like a skimmer and a refugium there is always a ton of pods running around inside of there.

When hanging out with the head of research at the Vancouver Aquarium a couple months ago I brought up the discussion of pods. He said that most pods that you buy won't actually form breeding populations as they eventually just die. Surprisingly a number of the pod species sold in stores aren't native to tropical saltwater conditions are are not raised in those conditions and so die fairly quick in our tanks. Not all, but most. His opinion also was that trigger pods are the devil as they are a predatory pod that can take down other smaller pods and fauna and even kill and eat fish fry (if you ever try to breed fish that is).
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Old 01-21-2011, 04:07 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by paddyob View Post
So, wondering. Does anyone regularly add PODS to their tanks... or live planktons?

Wondering if they just become food or if they will actually become a breeding population.

I have a small refugium, and have considered adding a Bag of live pods here and there, but don't want it to be a single feeding for my fish.
I think you can just buy a live rock from some one who has lots of pods and put it in your refugium. Feed them and they will grow fast.
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Old 01-24-2011, 02:17 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by paddyob View Post
So, wondering. Does anyone regularly add PODS to their tanks... or live planktons?

Wondering if they just become food or if they will actually become a breeding population.

I have a small refugium, and have considered adding a Bag of live pods here and there, but don't want it to be a single feeding for my fish.
Your refugium should have a slow flow which you can accomplish by having a turned down valve bypass from the outlet from your sump to your main tank,
The outlet from the refugium to your tank should be near the water line. What this means is that the pods and other live goodies are not flowing immediately into the tank. Some of the pods will make it to the main tank and to avoid them being eaten immediately run an ABS pipe right down to the bottom of your tank. Saw some slits in the pipe near the bottom to decrease the flow further and put rock around it. That way when the pods exit the refugium they find protection and a home to breed in the main tank.
Keep an ordinary light on over the refugium at all times. Overfeed the refugium phytoplankton to keep them healthy and multiplying.
Hope this helps.
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Old 01-24-2011, 02:28 AM
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Ha ok, I thought they were colder water pods because the need to keep the bottle in the fridg.

How do you "overfeed" the refugium with phytoplankton without it all leaking into the main tank? Also I have notice that a lot of my copepods go on the glass when there is a coat of green algae, I guess they eat that too?

Quote:
Originally Posted by naesco View Post
Your refugium should have a slow flow which you can accomplish by having a turned down valve bypass from the outlet from your sump to your main tank,
The outlet from the refugium to your tank should be near the water line. What this means is that the pods and other live goodies are not flowing immediately into the tank. Some of the pods will make it to the main tank and to avoid them being eaten immediately run an ABS pipe right down to the bottom of your tank. Saw some slits in the pipe near the bottom to decrease the flow further and put rock around it. That way when the pods exit the refugium they find protection and a home to breed in the main tank.
Keep an ordinary light on over the refugium at all times. Overfeed the refugium phytoplankton to keep them healthy and multiplying.
Hope this helps.
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  #10  
Old 01-24-2011, 03:31 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by daniella3d View Post
Ha ok, I thought they were colder water pods because the need to keep the bottle in the fridg.

How do you "overfeed" the refugium with phytoplankton without it all leaking into the main tank? Also I have notice that a lot of my copepods go on the glass when there is a coat of green algae, I guess they eat that too?
What I did is shut off the partially opened valve to the refugium. This allows the phyto to sink down to the bottom and be eaten by all the little inverts including pods. Yes, they love being in the green algae and for that reason the walls of the refugium are left natural
unless the refugium is in the living room and you have a non-reefer spouse/partner.
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