Regular nori sheets from the store are great to eat. That's what everyone feeds them. In Metro, a pack of 10 sheets costs about 13. I bought it recently. You can also buy Tropical Spirulina Forte. I got it at Arovana. It's also pure seaweed.
Ryan7682
I throw the toasted nori into the aquarium in chunks. The surgeons and the angel fish are going crazy over it, especially the angel fish. Soon after being submerged, the nori becomes mushy and turns into a greenish mass, resembling clumps of filamentous algae, but it doesn't turn into jelly. The fish devour it very quickly.
Karen81
Or there are magnetic clips for glass. You can use them to pinch a sheet in the water. The fish tear off pieces with both cheeks.
Debra8438
Well... they clearly don't suffer from pancreatitis.
Jeffery7866
I often treat them to lettuce leaves as well, they devour them eagerly. I attach a lettuce leaf with a rubber band to a small stone and throw it to the bottom; when they have eaten it, I retrieve it with a long tweezers.
Amber9312
I press it with a magnet for cleaning the glass, but the cunning Siganus vulpinus immediately starts nibbling at the base of the Nori (Porphyra), and the leaf begins to float around the aquarium, often getting stuck in the current... but that same Siganus vulpinus fearlessly continues to eat from the Resun Waver 15000 WaveMaker grid.
Salarias fasciatus only enjoys the bursts of cyanobacteria and doesn't eat anything else... I literally offered him Nori right under his nose.
As for the "GREEN SALAD" leaves, I would be more cautious at this time of year... you know, nitrates...
Crystal
So that dogs eat, I haven't heard. But any surgeon is obliged to crunch it.
John1464
I just read about the Vienna Sea House, where surgeons and other herbivores are simply fed PUMPKIN! They devour it with enthusiasm.
Michelle9986
When I gave my dog Salarias sinuosus Norii, she paid no attention to this product. But the foxfish Lo Siganus vulpinus and the hippo tang Paracanthurus hepatus devour it eagerly.
Jeffrey2277
Great. So we will give it too. I never even thought of that before. And after all, pumpkin is a wonderful plant feed, no worse than nori.
Lindsey3628
And my, in the freshwater... the pumpkin spoils the water very quickly, and it needs to be steamed with boiling water... sorry, it's just that this product was necessary in breeding discus... the carotene in it, it's just a small warning... try a little at first...
Meghan
What if we don't steam this pumpkin, but instead grate it and give it raw to the surgeons? It's a pity I don't have a pumpkin right now, otherwise I would have tried it. In general, my butterflies, Heniocus acuminatus, can easily munch on a piece of cottage cheese, a moth that has fallen on the water's surface, a piece of white or black bread—by the way, surgeons also don't refuse that—boiled corn, and once a butterfly consumed a spider that had descended on a web right into her area of culinary interest. In general, surgeons, angels, and butterflies have such an appetite that you could throw the devil into the aquarium, and they would eat him...
Stephen5841
Here, take a look.
James3382
Here you go:
Not much, but they eat it, as always, Lo tried it first, that's why she's Liza.
By the way, a plastic tie is threaded through a piece of pumpkin, very simple and reliable...
Today I scalded the pumpkin with boiling water, as a result, everyone started eating it, not like nori, but still someone keeps pounding the pumpkin all the time.
Katie5500
Has the water not become cloudy today?
Kenneth7210
No, not at all... quite the opposite, but the pumpkin is not really relevant here. I believe this feed has a right to exist... I brought a huge pumpkin from the balcony - now I will regularly give it in pieces, alternating with nori... they nibble on it all day, but they are still far from eating it all... and this is natural carotene, the fish should become brighter... in general, pumpkin and carrots have always been part of fish feed as a vitamin supplement... thanks for the tip...
David2398
So the pumpkin has now firmly entered the diet of herbivores. That's how it should be understood. It's no coincidence that I spotted half of one at the market yesterday...