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#1
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![]() My copperbands are all different, one nips a bit at acans but doesn't touch the zoas in her tank, another in a different tank is my big suck, she prefers to eat from my hand and doesn't seem to touch any coral, my third I don't know how she survives, I never see her eat anything but she must find something in the tank, I have had her for about a year.
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#2
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![]() I had good luck with a CBB for a good two years. My tank was an LPS & softie tank and I never observed picking. The tank was well established and had a flourishing copepod colony. I don't know why it died, but just wasn't around one day.
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#3
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![]() My CBB eats out of my hand. I keep her well fed; she gets clams on the half-shell, and allkinds of frozen foods. I've never seen her nipping at corals of any kind.
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#4
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![]() Is there anything you guys have done when first getting your CBB to help your success? Maybe feeding certain things in QT? My system is fairly established, and I dumped a bottle of pods in my chaeto ball a few months ago and don't have any fish that actively consume them.
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#5
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![]() Need to put them in QT first, where they can be trained to take frozen mysis first, and then later dried foods. If you put them into the display tank right away, it is much harder to get them to eat, because of the other fish grabbing all the food and scaring off the Copperband. Here is a vid how I got them to eat dry food. This was back a few years ago.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fQjAZjafxM
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#6
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![]() These fish are very slow eaters , I actually picked one up today . It was eating frozen Mysis at the store , but they kinda chew there food , spit it out and suck it back in until its small enough . My first choice for a reef safe butterfly .
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#7
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![]() Actually, the best butterflys for me are the Pearlscales. Did a great job of eradicating my aiptasia (better than the copperbands), and much easier to feed. And reef safe, too (contrary to what you might read on the internet). I have one in each of my tanks, along with softies, LPS and SPS, and they leave the corals alone. Again, though, need to get them feeding first in a QT, and then transition to a display tank. But once trained, they accept frozen, dry, pellets, or basically anything that your other fish eat.
__________________
Reef Pilot's Undersea Oasis: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/sho...d.php?t=102101 Frags FS: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/sho...d.php?t=115022 Solutions are easy. The real difficulty lies in discovering the problem. |