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#1
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![]() I was just wondering of any had ever thought of doing this. If one of your fish were to "pass away" would it be harmful to feed its remains to the rest of the fish in the tank. In the wild I assume that this happens all the time... Any unforeseen problems with this?
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#2
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![]() My biggest concern would be causing an amonia spike due to the feeding frenzy. If its a small fish, it may not be an issue, but a larger one would be. I'd get it out of the tank as soon as I noticed it. I suppose you could portion it up and feed it back that way, thus controlling the waste volume and avoiding the spike. Just not sure how well I could handle mincing and chopping my once prized specimin.
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I retired and got a fixed income but it's broke. Ed _______________________________________ 50 gallon FOWLR, 10 gallon sump. 130 gallon reef, 20 gallon sump, 10 gallon refugium. 10 gallon quarantine. 60 gallon winter tank for pond fish. 300 gallon pond with waterfall. |
#3
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![]() Quote:
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#4
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![]() Better to feed it to them than eat it yourself!
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__________________
THE BARQUARIUM: 55 gallon cube - 50 lbs LR - ASM G3 skimmer - 30 Gallon sump - 22 Gallon refugium / frag tank - 4x 24 watt HO T5's - Mag 9.5 return - Pin Point PH monitor - 400 watt XM 20K MH in Lumenarc reflector - Dual stage GFO/NO3 media reactor - 6 stage RODI auto top up -Wavemaster Pro running 3 Koralia 2's. Fully stocked with fish, corals and usually some fine scotch http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=55041 |
#5
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![]() Do you gut it and clean it first?
![]() Kind of a bizarre plan... don't think I could do it.
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---------------------- Alan |
#6
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![]() You also have to think of why the fish died in the first place. Feeding a diseased fish to other fish probably isn't the best thing.
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