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#1
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![]() Hey!
We picked up a small longnose butterfly on Monday from J&L and we still have not been able to convince it to eat. We have tried Formula Two flake food and also we've been feeding frozen mysis shrimp. Does anyone else have any suggestions as to what else we can try to get this little guy to eat? |
#2
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![]() Garlic,
also, if you have any seaweed, keep a bit always in the tank, so they can graze on it when they like. |
#3
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![]() we have seaweed in the tank already for our regal tang so that shouldn't be an issue. I guess we can try the garlic. Do they get stressed out easily? It just seems to stay in one corner of the tank at the front of the glass and swim up and down. No one seems to bother it but it's acting strange.
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#4
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![]() What else do you have available to you for foods? Brine shrimp, while not particularly nutritious seems to help get some fish eating. You can also try open clams on a half shell, so I hear. I would be wary of the clams though, just in case you have any of your own ornamentals.
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#5
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![]() we don't currently have any brine shrimp at home, but I was thinking that I would go and get some tomorrow. Maybe that will work....hopefully. We don't have any clams in the tank currently but more than likely will get some in the future. I guess we'll wait and see. We've never had a fish that didn't want to eat before so we're both kinda puzzled.
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#6
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![]() i got one not too long ago from J&L's and i started him on arcti Pods (dead ones stored in fridge) also purchased from there. Now he eats everything i put in there.
Kyle |
#7
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![]() thanks for the info. I don't have any of that at home...do you think that cyclopeeze would be something to try...kinda along the same line? I'm not sure when I would be able to get out to J&L next and get some of that.
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#8
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![]() With fish like that, ones that are yet ready for prepared foods, the best way that I've found is to offer them something that moves. Hatch brine shrimp, add live pods, etc. Something about hunting food seems to make fish very happy. Try meaty foods too.
Any luck with the nori? |
#9
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![]() FWIW, as an occasional treat, I feed my CBB clam-on-the-half-shell and he leaves my ornamental clams alone. I'm pretty sure it's not just the smell of clam meat that is attractive to the fish, it's the smell of clam blood (or whatever you would call it in a gastropod). I'm not sure I totally subscribe to the idea that feeding them clams or mussels or oysters or whatever, gives them the idea that clams are OK to eat - I think they more or less already know.
So that might be an option. What I do is buy live shellfish (mussels, oysters, etc., whatever I feel like that day), from the supermarket (T&T in my case) - 5 or 6 at a time, it costs about $1, then I freeze them when I get home. I've tried just buying 1 and feeding it right away, but you look like an idiot when you ask for 1 mussel or 1 oyster. I've tried buying 5-6 and keeping them live in the sump, but usually the tropical reef temps kill them within a day or two and it's pretty gross. But freezing them keeps them from fouling on you, and it's easier to crack them open. I feel a little bad about it but the flip side is, if it wasn't my fish it'd be someone else eating them.. their fate was sealed long before I ever came into their picture. I do it because my CBB only otherwise eats mysis, and I worry about such a monotypic diet. Every fish I've ever had that would only eat mysis, rarely lived longer than a year or two, pretty much all of them having succumbed to some kind of obvious intestinal malady. It could also be that mysis itself might get fouled ... in any case I don't like it when I can't offer a variety of things so the clam-on-the-half-shell it is. Actually all my fish seem to enjoy mussels in particular, a mussel shell is cleaned up pretty much within an hour or so. I think it's more of an exception than the rule when a butterfly takes to dried foods (flakes or pellets). In time he may take to those, since longnosed butterflies are often regarded as less fussy than CBB's, but it still probably takes some time to get used to the idea that this strange stuff floating around is acceptable food.
__________________
-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#10
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![]() thanks for the replies guys. Delphinius, when you give your CBB the clam/mussel, do you just place it one the sandbed and let them go to town? That sounds like an interesting idea and I am willing to try anything to get the little guy eating. I'll try the cyclopeeze first when I get home today and if it's not willing to go for that, I just may head out and get some clams for it.
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