Thanks for all the input guys- I hope this will become a very informational thread we can all learn from.
Salmonslayer, I agree that heavy feeding and also that heavy skimming and water changes are important to get food to your corals- even the photosynthetic ones- and then get the excess out.
Burning2nd, Charlie, and flyguy-agreed that variety is important, and I do actually make a mush of the formula one, freeze dried plankton, nori, and a wee bit o garlic for the fish in a food processor. With the rest I feed separately because thawing and refreezing allows much of what is nutritionally valuable in a fresh food to be degraded so I just thaw once and feed. Also I think fresh is good if you have access like flyguy- then you can mix and freeze-thaw just once. And I think these are all things to keep in mind about foods you feed for all your inhabitants, But actually what I am most interested in here is feeding the corals/inverts and from what I understand home style blenders just don’t get the food small enough for many of these critters. That’s why I am so interested in alternative foods that are - say less then 500 microns!
There are a lot of foods marketed for corals some look better then others-but what really works? Some have additives like yeast, yeast extract, and egg. These just don’t seem like they would be desirable to corals? Some have ingredients that look good but are they in a form (physically and chemically) useable to the corals? These are the things I am wondering. Anyone know some experts on any of this they could point over here?
DonW- What funky foods have you feed your corals that you did not like, and why didn’t you like them? Also the spectrum pellets were not something I had previously considered so I looked them up. What size do you feed? The small fish formula is .35mm or 350 microns so that is actually in the size range I am thinking would be good(of course I would like as much variety as possible). Have you witnessed any of your corals consume it? What species? It is intriguing to me even though it is marketed for fish. Here is what I found for the analysis: MAIN INGREDIENTS: Krill Meal, Fish Meal, Wheat Flour, Amino Acids, Algae Meal, Soybean Meal, Fish Oil, Beta Carotene, Spirulina, Vitamin A Acetate, D-Activated Animal- Sterol (D3), Vitamin B12 Supplement, Riboflavin Supplement, Niacin, Folic Acid, Calcium Pantothenate, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Thiamine, Biotin. GUARANTEED ANALYSIS: Protein 34% Min., Fat 5% Min., Fiber 5% Max., Ash 9% Max., Moisture 10% Max. I like that it has Beta carotene, spirulina, fish oil, and a high protein content. I do not know how beneficial the other additives are (or actually the spirulina being a fresh water algae)? and I am not sure that I like the wheat and soy meal in there!
(Oh, and Charlie- Your welcome about the ride even though it really did not get you there any quicker then if you hitched with Kevin after all- but anytime I can help!)
Cheers,
Tracy