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#1
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![]() I know a number of hobbyists that have their mandarins eating NLS, some for years now. NLS is also one of the main foods fed to the captive bred fish at the ORA facility. http://www.orafarm.com/products/fish/dragonets.html
The fact that a pellet has a high moisture content, and is soft, has absolutely nothing to do with digestibility, or overall nutrient content. Well done on the mandarin, Ken. |
#2
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![]() Unbelievable, this is sooooo awsome ! Without seeing the video, I would not have believed it.
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#3
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![]() Quote:
When you bake food you remove the moisture through the drying process that can be above 140 degrees for over 30 minutes, by nature there is a loss in nutrients, non baked food are broken down swiftly under the fish's natural digestion process, it is more what the fish is used to in the wild, fish eat raw soft flesh/tissue or soft algea. unbaked foods are pretty much raw ingredients, the nutrient content stays stays in throughout the process and this is where New Era is different and why nearly all the worlds public aquariums and research faciliites use it including Dubai Mall and now Vancouver aquarium research laboratory. However, awesome work by Ken next step Mandarin breeding program? ![]() Last edited by Aqua-Digital; 10-06-2011 at 05:32 PM. |
#4
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#5
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![]() We are actually expanding our breeding program, but due to space limitations we are very limited.
Between Doug and myself, we have been able to get quite a few species going. From clownfish to cardinals to seahorses. |