keeping fish healthy

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Paul B

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Joined
Jan 19, 2006
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Location
New York
I believe the most important thing there is about keeping fish healthy is their diet. Second only to water conditions. I very rarely see people or for that matter stores, feed fish a healthy diet. Most people just feed either mysis, pellets, krill or some other commercially prepared foods. Those foods are of course fine but fish in the sea never see mysis, pellets flakes etc. We have at our disposal for practically free better foods that are more available and healthier for the fish. I myself also feed prepared frozen food because it is easy but it is not all I feed. If you want to get fish into breeding condition, which they rarely are in our tanks, you must feed them other things. IMO the best food for fish is shellfish and whole fish. The reason I think this is first of all they love it but besides that, when we feed shellfish like clams, mussels and oysters we feed the internal organs of these animals to our fish which is where most of the nutrition is. There is very little usable nutrition in a fish fillet although it is better than flakes but fillets is only fish muscle. In the sea fish eat the entire fish including bones, liver guts, everything, and they depend on this. Fish get almost all of their calcium from eating fish bones, they get most of their vitamin A from fish livers.
If you do much diving you would instantly see that fish in the sea almost always look better than fish in a tank. Stress has a lot to do with it as our fish are always stressed but I think diet also plays a role. In my own tank fish almost never die of anything except old age or an accident. I am working on the accidents but I think I have the food thing down pat. I also would never just put food in my tank, it is always fed with a rubber bulb with an acrylic tube on it. All of the food is eaten and I can target different fish different foods.
Shellfish are the easiest, cheapest thing to feed. Just buy a couple of clams, oysters etc, you can even buy them shelled. Freeze them and with a sharp knife, I use an Exacto knife, slice small portions off. By doing this, we are giving the fish the entire clam with all the internal organs. You can feed shellfish fresh but they are messy and hard to cut. They also do not last more than a couple of days.
If you don't see your fish exhibiting breeding behavior, they may not be as healthy as you think. Most fish (except schooling fish) should be cleaning a nesting spot, chasing other fish away or just looking great. Of course if you have a pair, most fish will breed. You may not be able to raise the fry but they should spawn or at least attempt to. Healthy fish are always spawning they almost never get sick and they should live for many years.
Have a great holiday.
Paul
 
Good Point!

Thanks for posting this Paul I see a lot of people make up a blended mush with allot of what you have posted. I do allot of bottom fishing over here off the Oregon coast And I purposely Fillet out small steaks for feeding my fish & and Anomeas and I personally see the benefits in the fish Inverts and well check out the results :)
 
Even when I eat octopus I eat the entire octopus.
I know, gross ins't it?
 
Well... It’s your stomach.
I guess what ever it takes to keep up that breeding behavior eh? :lol:
 
Great read Paul, now Ive got another excuse to buy oysters lol. On a more serious note what about harvesting your own?? a bit worried about red tide and toxins our coasts aint what they used to be.
 
I have been harvesting my own as long as I have fish. I am sure freezing will render the red tide harmless as it is a paracite. If you want to feed them fresh and you are worried about paracites just soak the food in fresh water for half an hour. Paracites hate that. :D
 
Rob that above picture of me eating the whole octopus was taken in Sicily a few weeks ago. I ordered an appetizer and since I speak very little Italian I got octopus and there, they serve it whole.
Paul
 
I’m guessing that’s the Italian rendition of calamari (sp?) compared to here in the states.
I had a similar experience in Germany many years ago when I ordered what I thought was going to be a pepperoni pizza. Instead I got a pizza covered with pepperacini peppers. Good thing I like hot peppers!
 
Rob, Calamari is squid. Pulpo is octopus. I actually grew up on it because my family has been in the fish business for many generations and I live on Long Island NY. I am the first generation that got out of it. I am 100% Sicilian decent but I can only speak a few words of it. We went to Sicily to find my roots which we did.
Merry Christmas.
Paul
 

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