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Old 09-23-2015, 11:00 PM
Animal-Chin Animal-Chin is offline
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Default Are blood worms ok for saltwater fish?

I feed my fish Mysis, brine, krill and plankton but have never done blood worms. Does anyone else?
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Old 09-24-2015, 12:38 AM
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I feed my fish Mysis, brine, krill and plankton but have never done blood worms. Does anyone else?
I feed blood worms about twice a week. My copperband butterfly seems to be the biggest fan, and the others eat them up without complaining either.
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Old 09-24-2015, 01:38 AM
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I feed blood worms about twice a week. My copperband butterfly seems to be the biggest fan, and the others eat them up without complaining either.
Ditto
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Old 09-24-2015, 03:48 AM
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Nutritionally speaking, saltwater organisms generally have a more complex amino acid profile than freshwater organisms. Bloodworms are freshwater critters and our reefs are saltwater so on paper bloodworms aren't the best choice as a staple diet. Does it really matter? Probably not, unless bloodworms make up a significant portion of the diet.

I don't normally feed them, but they are in my freezer because I used to enjoy training Mandarins to eat frozen food and I found some (few) took to Bloodworms better than Brine.
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Old 09-24-2015, 04:03 AM
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Originally Posted by Myka View Post
Nutritionally speaking, saltwater organisms generally have a more complex amino acid profile than freshwater organisms. Bloodworms are freshwater critters and our reefs are saltwater so on paper bloodworms aren't the best choice as a staple diet. Does it really matter? Probably not, unless bloodworms make up a significant portion of the diet.

I don't normally feed them, but they are in my freezer because I used to enjoy training Mandarins to eat frozen food and I found some (few) took to Bloodworms better than Brine.
mysis are freshwater
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Old 09-24-2015, 05:40 AM
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This may be a little off topic, but mysis shrimps that are being sold in the aquarium trade are not all the same species. Some brands mainly sell fresh water mysis (PE). Some are brackish/fresh water (hikari). Some are advertised as saltwater mysis.
FYI, if you want to train a fish to eat, instead of blood worms, you can try live black worms. The movements of live black worms attract some finicky eaters.
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Old 09-24-2015, 05:50 AM
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FYI, if you want to train a fish to eat, instead of blood worms, you can try live black worms. The movements of live black worms attract some finicky eaters.
Live blackworms also have this miraculous properly of keeping fish mad healthy. I've fattened up and maintained so many finicky and/or challenging fish using these worms that I could probably buy a new motorcycle with the savings. Honestly, if they weren't such a pain, I'd have them on hand all the time.

Attractive prey movement + Very strong nutritional profile = great tool for acclimatizing and maintaining new fish!
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Old 09-24-2015, 05:54 AM
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Live blackworms also have this miraculous properly of keeping fish mad healthy. I've fattened up and maintained so many finicky and/or challenging fish using these worms that I could probably buy a new motorcycle with the savings. Honestly, if they weren't such a pain, I'd have them on hand all the time.

Attractive prey movement + Very strong nutritional profile = great tool for acclimatizing and maintaining new fish!

Hey Albert where does one get these blackworms?
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Old 09-24-2015, 05:57 AM
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Black worms - blood worms ... same thing ? I don't know as back in my freshwater days they were known as 'worms', and they were live.

So are they the same, or are there 2 kinds ?
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Old 09-24-2015, 06:32 AM
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Hey Albert where does one get these blackworms?
King Ed's had them years ago. Maybe check with Patrick at Canadian Aquatics?

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Originally Posted by gregzz4 View Post
Black worms - blood worms ... same thing ? I don't know as back in my freshwater days they were known as 'worms', and they were live.

So are they the same, or are there 2 kinds ?
Different animal. Bloodworms are a larval midge (an insect). Blackworms are an annelid (a true worm). Also not to be confused with Tubifex worms, another type of annelid.
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