Copepods (pods) are essentially required for any reef aquarium. They perform three important ecological tasks: (1) Graze on benthic
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Live foods
Now more than ever, there is a huge variety of foods available to the marine aquarist. If there is one, big distinction between them it is whether they are live or not live. Almost as a rule, live is better. There are several reasons for this. In some cases it’s because of what’s in them, and in others it’s because of what isn’t in them. Heavily processed aquarium foods, much like human processed foods, are formulated and manufactured with one thing in mind: Convenience. Now, it’s not like we’re all looking to make things more time-consuming or complicated for ourselves. But let’s face it; we don’t keep reef aquaria because they’re easy. We do so because they are, when healthy, amazing to behold. Building and maintaining even a modest, so-so system requires some time and expense. Just as it is with our maintenance routine, if we start to slack or skimp when it comes to animal nutrition, the system and every living in it will look much, much less than amazing to say the least. Processed foods, and even many preserved foods, lose important dietary constituents during the production and packaging process. Particularly where heat is involved, many essential vitamins, antioxidants, etc. are lost. Exposure to light, freezer burn, etc. are other factors to consider. And then substances such as preservatives are often added, even while we remain unsure about their long-term effects on the health of the potentially thousands of species we might keep. Live foods, on the other hand, are complete and natural. Even chemically delicate but nutritionally valuable compounds such as enzymes are left intact. Their natural behavior even makes a sizable difference. For example, motile phytoplankton and bacterioplankton swim in the water column long enough to get captured by sessile, filter-feeding inverts; copepods move in a manner that elicits the feeding response of picky eaters such as mandarins and sea horses. But that’s not all; live foods are, overall, comparatively less messy. Powders from dry foods and juices from frozen foods can significantly pollute your aquarium waters, necessitating extra water changes, extra use of chemical filtrants, additional equipment, etc. (who’s saving money/time now?). In contrast, live phyto actually removes nutrients from the water, and live pods actually clean the bottom and tank panels! In this section you will learn how to use live foods and how their use improves the health of your precious livestock.
39 Posts
Are You Ready to Keep Jellyfish?
There have been a few times that I've been asked how to care for jellyfish. And, long story short, it's complicated! In this short
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When to Choose Poseidon’s Feast
Back in “the day,” to acquire a seed culture of copepods, aquarists would typically have to resort to scooping a couple cups of gravel
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Three Great Hacks for AlgaeBarn Simple Brine
For about a century, brine shrimp (Artemia spp.) have been among the most important of all aquarium foods. Not only are they extremely
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Corals in a Box of Water: Creating a Natural Reef Tank
We’ve come a long, long way in advancing natural marine aquarium keeping. Those of us who started out in the 80’s with barren
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Gutloading Live Microcrustaceans
In the sense that very, very few animals specialize to eat only one thing, all animals are omnivores, and prefer live foods. For
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Why EcoPods are the Best Live Copepod Product Ever
Earth is a planet of pods. Wherever there is water, there are amphipods, isopods, branchiopods, and so on. Pods are an integral part of
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The Whole Package: Integrating AlgaeBarn’s Kits & Combos
AlgaeBarn is hardly the only aquarium hobby-centered business to produce phytoplankton and macroalgae. But we like to think that we’re
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Daphnia as a Live Marine Aquarium Food
Daphnia sp., widely known as water fleas, are hardly new to the aquarium scene. Freshwater aquarists (and perhaps quite a few saltwater
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What’s the Difference Between PNS ProBio and PNS YelloSno?
Reef aquarium keeping has gotten a lot more sophisticated over the years. Fortunately, that doesn’t necessarily mean that it has gotten
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A Saltwater Smorgasbord: Using The Ultimate EcoPack
Though they are nowhere near as ecologically complex as actual, wild coral reefs, reef aquaria can be incredibly complicated and
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Phytoplankton
The first link in a food chain is always a primary producer, like phytoplankton (i.e. algae, plants, various types of bacteria). This
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Brine Shrimp: Live Food Fast
Prepared foods have their merits. Aside from the obvious (their convenience), they are consistent in quality, easily available and
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Tig Pods: A Food for Many
The reef aquarium hobby continues to reach new heights. This is most evident by the extraordinarily beautiful systems we see on display
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A Beginners Guide to Mysis Shrimp
Just like any other pet or animal you care for, it is important to be sure that the inhabitants of your saltwater aquarium are getting
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Kickstarting Your New Refugium
Whether it's just been installed as part of a bone-dry, newly set up aquarium system or as an add-on to a well-established, heavily
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A Beginners Guide to Brine Shrimp
Do you feed your saltwater fish flake foods, pellets or frozen mysis? How about live brine shrimp or live fish foods in general? In
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Tetraselmis: The Big and Fatty Alga
There is probably no single type of microalgae that is ideal as feed for a varied community of captive animals (such as a reef tank).
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Mixed Microalgal Feeds for a Balanced Nutrition
Primary producers—those organisms (e.g. plants such as algae) that build new biomass from inorganic sources of energy—form the very
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