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Thread: silversides?

  1. #1

    Default silversides?

    At the April meeting, John commented that most things on the reef don't eat fish, so he uses other seafood items in his food. Fine, that makes sense. I have always done the same, mostly by coincedence.

    I've seen a few threads now where somebody talked about feeding BTAs silversides. I think maybe that makes sense. I have a 26 inch green brittle star, and some RBTAs. Would my RBTAs and my brittle star eat fish in nature? I've always fed chunks of shrimp and sea scallops (yeah, my critters frequently eat better than I do).

    Or, more to the point, should I be feeding my RBTAs and brittle star silversides?


    Jack
    Big whorls have little whorls, Which feed on their velocity;
    And little whorls have lesser whorls, And so on to viscosity

    Lewis Richardson in 1922

  2. #2
    Join Date
    03-04-2005
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    Default

    i wouldnt. i dont really spot feed my anemones anything. they catch and eat small bits of the food i give the fish which is mostly mysis and krill. just for reference, i have a rbta, ritteri, sebae and lta in my tank.
    Ace
    The Shade Tree Craftsman



  3. #3

    Default

    It really depends on the health of the animal, if its in good health and conditions are right, you shouldnt have to target feed either unless you just want to give them a treat. If the animal is in less than good health, a little extra nutrition may encourage recovery to some degree. Green brittles are pretitory by nature and will trap live food when it can, with one that large, Id be concerned about the fish and shrimp in the tank...
    Last edited by JimD; Thu, 21st May 2009 at 06:54 PM.

  4. #4

    Default

    my fish tend to never let the food hit the ground so my anemones never get to eat i do feed my RBTA ( the top one) brine shrimp and blood worms every so many days (the bottom one) i never feed cuz i have to go deeper into the water and as a result its a lot smaller

  5. #5
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    bayou vista on the bay
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    Default

    I would also say it depends on how frequently and heavy you feed

  6. #6
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gseclipse02 View Post
    .....as a result its a lot smaller
    that may also be a result of it getting less light since it is lower in the tank

    i agree with jim, my answer was based on how healthy i know jack's anemones are i still wouldnt feed silversides to even a bleached anemone, it is just much easier for them to digest smaller pieces of food.
    Ace
    The Shade Tree Craftsman



  7. #7
    Join Date
    07-21-2005
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    281N of 1604, San Antonio, TX
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    Default

    My problem with feeding anemones silversides is that, unless it's a BIG anemone, that's a lot of dead fish to dump in your tank - most of it won't be used by the anemone, and gets expelled. It's easy to foul a tank that way.

    Mine rarely get target fed. IF I'm trying to get them to split, I might. And then a krill or 2 - that's it.
    Bill

    215g FOWLR... and anemones, GSP, gorgonians... carp, that isn't FO!

    "I killed my first SW Fish in 1971..."

  8. #8

    Default

    If I do feed, I only feed maybe a 1/4 to 1/2" pieces or smaller, never the entire fish, thats way too much!

  9. #9
    Join Date
    03-09-2009
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    Las Cruces, NM
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    Default

    I feed my BTA silversides. I only give it 1/3 to 1/2 a silverside or it expells some later. I target feed every week and it is growing like a weed. Recently it started to split but has not completely separated yet.
    It started out as a bleached BTA but is nice and green now and the bubble tips are really swollen. It is a very happy anemone. Many peolpe don't feed directly but a lot of other web sites say they can slowly waste away without supplemental feedings. I think it depends on how much light they get.
    Anemones have the ability to "taste" what touches them and selectively fire their nematocysts only on a food item. If it doesn't 'grab it' it probably is not a natural food item, try something else. Mine will take mysis and krill but won't take table shrimp.
    Mike

  10. #10

    Default

    I only feed pieces of seafood about the size of a pea every couple of days. I would do the same with silversides if I used them.

    I know the anemones don't need feeding but I'm trying to get them to grow and split. So if it works, great. If it doesn't, oh well.

    Feeding the starfish frozen food is cheeper than feeding him live turbo snails and skunk shrimp. He's one of my favorite critters. When I feed him in front of guests, I always get oohs and aahs.


    Ok, bubble tips: a sign of stress or a sign of contentment? I've heard alot of people say bubble tips and splitting are signs of stress. I'm thinking maybe not. How do they look in nature?

    Jack
    Last edited by rocketeer; Fri, 22nd May 2009 at 10:13 AM.
    Big whorls have little whorls, Which feed on their velocity;
    And little whorls have lesser whorls, And so on to viscosity

    Lewis Richardson in 1922

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