How do I know how much is enough, and how much is too much?
![Confused :-\](./images/smilies/7.gif)
With algae wafers, I just give her one and wait a few hours until I give her another.
I really need help to know how to safely feed her vegetables.
Thanks!
My Jose (L001) is now 10 inches TL.Suckermouth wrote:Feed as much as gets eaten in about a day; if you're seeing food left over, then you're feeding too much.
Great! (She has no problem with excretion.zeebo wrote:agree with above. And if you are concerned about bloat, don't give it too much protien/meaty/fish foods. Read the ingredients on the wafers as some have fish or shrimp in them. De-shelled peas once a week are great for cleaning them out and most love them . HTH
Georgie
I usually do slices but my guess is that a half inch cube will be quite manageable for a 10" Pterygoplichthys to eat within a day.mg7454 wrote:My Jose (L001) is now 10 inches TL.Suckermouth wrote:Feed as much as gets eaten in about a day; if you're seeing food left over, then you're feeding too much.
As a starting point, would a 1/2-inch cube be about right?
I don't want to risk over-feeding, I really love this fish!
Thanks!
I have never had that problem, nor have I heard anyone else have that problem since I joined this site - I feed zucchini (well, we call it courgette here in England, but it's the same green squash-type vegetable). Several of my fish quite like the skin, and will eat that before getting to the white parts inside.characinfan wrote:Just a caution about zucchini format: don't feed them in rounds unless you slice through the rind in some places. Years ago in Tropical Fish Hobbyist (I think) I read an article about someone's pleco that ate the softer centre out of a zucchini round and then got stuck in the rind, which jammed the fish's gills shut, and the poor thing suffocated.