No, you cannot. Clown fish are salt water fish and the rest you have named are all tropical/freshwater fish. Clownfish are saltwater fish and need saltwater. Freshwater will kill clownfish very quickly.
It is all well and good to give your clownfish the right mix of animal and plant matter. But how frequently should you feed them? If you feed ordinary fish too many times a day, you will ultimately harm them due to overfeeding. But if you don't feed them enough times in the day, you risk underfeeding and health issues.
The parents take no part in the rearing of the young. They will protect their eggs but once the eggs hatch, the babies are on their own. The fry can get eaten by other fish, swept away or even eaten by their own parents! The fry start off eating rotifers and slowly graduate to baby brine shrimp.
Clownfish are hermaphrodites. There are many types of hermaphroditism seen in marine fish, but clownfish are typically protandrous hermaphrodites. In the aquarium, clownfish can successfully be kept as pairs, although some squabbling can occur, and in a large tank it's possible to maintain them effectively as a group.
Live Meaty Fish FoodThe best live foods to feed your Clownfish are shrimps such as Krill, Mysis, and Brine. You can find these fish foods at your local pet shops.
Only one. That should probably be the only fish in a 10 gallon aquarium. One or two small gobies with the clown would work, but nothing more as in fish.
Eating HabitsYou can feed them freeze-dried, frozen, and live food. They will eat flakes, pellets, Mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, etc. You don't have to feed your shrimp directly. As you can see, they eat the same food as your clownfish.
Some of the most popular live foods for saltwater aquarium fish include brine shrimp, bloodworms and white worms. These foods and more can also be found in frozen and freeze-dried form. In addition to these foods, your fish may also enjoy frozen or freeze-dried prawns, beef heart, tubifex worms and microworms.
Feeding marine formula to freshwater fish isn't going to cause a problem. Feeding freshwater formula to saltwater fish may, since there are fatty acids that saltwater fish need which freshwater fish don't need. Omega 3-'s aren't bad for freshwater fish, but they're not as critical for healthy animals.
Number of Feedings per DayIn general, most fish do quite well on one feeding per day. However, some owners prefer to feed their fish twice a day. Young, growing fish might need to eat three or more times per day. Regardless of the quantity of feedings, the key is to keep each feeding very small.
10 Compatible Lionfish Tank Mates
- Saltwater Angelfish are ideal tank mates for Lionfish because most of them are too large to be eaten and they eat entirely different foods.
- Tangs and Surgeonfish are colorful vegetarians that typically form large schools in nature.
Brine shrimp can be fed to a wide range of fish including Bettas, neon tetras, cory catfish, the kuhli loach, and many more. To be honest, it's harder to find fish that CAN'T eat brine shrimp than ones that can.
Vaction fish feeders are inexpensive and are of great help especially when you're away. You can even use it even if you're not on vacation. Just fill them up with your fish flakes or pellet food. It will last for a while before you need to refill them again.
You should take note of what sort of flakes you're feeding your fish, though. Saltwater fish and freshwater fish have different nutritional needs, so you should feed marine flake to the former and tropical flake to the latter.
Your current fish species required feeding more than 1 time a day, there are not predator species that can each a large meal then can go for days/weeks without a meal. Feeding them every other day will be fine for short term but in long run will lead to problems and issues.
The amount of bloodworm to feed your fish will vary depending on the size of your tank and the amount of fish you have. Typical guidelines for feeding fish suggest that you should give no more than what can be eaten in around 3 minutes, as the excess food can cause contamination issues which can harm the fish.
A healthy, grown-up aquarium fish can go from 3 days to 1 whole week, without eating any food. Some fish species can even live for more than 2 weeks without eating. Whether in nature or in an aquarium – an adult fish has sufficient body mass and fat reserves to skip a couple of meals once in a while.
Saltwater fish can't survive in freshwater because their bodies are highly concentrated of salt solution (too much for freshwater). The water would flow into their body until all their cells accumulate so much water that they bloat and die eventually.
Jim McDavid of Tropical Fish Hobbyist recommends getting a protein skimmer rated for at least a 100 gallon aquarium. Since nano reef aquariums have a small volume of water, and contain such sensitive organisms, you need a powerful skimmer -- or alternate filtration systems -- to provide pristine water.
Well-Known Member. My Clownfish and two chromis wont eat pellets even if I soak them in water for like 7 minutes. The pellets are Fauna Marin Soft Clownfish pellets. They'll only eat frozen foods.
Depending on species and size, feed small amounts 1 to 2 times daily, no more than fish will eat in 1 to 2 minutes. Thaw frozen food before feeding.
As you angelfish age, you can feed them more pellets and flakes than live foods. For general guidelines, younger angelfish need to eat 3 to 4 times a day. After they grow to full size, however, cut back the amount of food and stick to a strict schedule. Angelfish will overeat and become overweight if fed too much.
The Clowns like to eat, at least once a day for general maintenance purposes. For breeding and optimal health, two to three feedings (not too heavy ) a day. If in good shape and well fed, they will go a week without being fed, but not has a routine thing each and every week of the year.
Take thawed shrimp and soak it in a drop of the garlic. using a syringe-turkey baster you can feed the fish and any coral or inverts you may want to spot feed. If just feeding the fish you can just dump it in the tank. Some folks turn off the pumps while feeding, some leave them on.