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decapsulated brine shrimp eggs

Posted: 20 Dec 2006, 03:34
by corywink
Anyone feed decapsulated brine shrimp eggs to their cory fry? Will 1 week old fry be able to eat these eggs? I have some 1 week old sterbai fry and I'm feeding microworms and powered flake, would like to add some baby brine shrimp but don't want to bother hatching them.

Posted: 20 Dec 2006, 04:51
by kim m
Decapsulated brine shrimp eggs are great fry food. Sterbai fry are quite small though, but after a week or two of feeding on microworms they will be OK eating DBS-eggs.

I use them for my fry when they get big enough to eat them.

Posted: 21 Dec 2006, 08:12
by corywink
Thanks, I'll pick some up

Posted: 22 Dec 2006, 19:11
by bronzefry
Do you need to wash them off at all?
Amanda

Posted: 23 Dec 2006, 18:14
by apistomaster
Hi Amanda,
When my Corydoras sterbai began their fall spawning run I was caught without microworms and I tried decapsulated brine shrimp cysts and it was an abject failure. I lost over 500 fry. I finally got my microworms and now I have another 400 sterbai. I concur with the other posters in that once they are a few weeks on microworms they can and do accept the decysted eggs well. I even had trouble trying to get the newly hatched sterbai to take fresh frozen brineshrimp nauplii. At that stage I also use a lot of fresh rozen nauplii as they seem less prone to promoting the almost inevitable hydra bloom that comes with heavy use of live brineshrimp. What I usually do is kill the live bbs prior to feeding them to the Corys so they drop right to the bottom and get promptly eaten, again to help minimize hydra problems. Sterbai are a delicate Cory in their larval stage, IME. They contract bacterial diseases very easily during the larval stage if water conditions are not kept pristine.

Posted: 23 Dec 2006, 18:23
by apistomaster
Amanda,
I couldn't edit for some reason but I wanted to add that you should rinse both decap bse and live brine nauplii thoroughly prior to using them. I was not clear whether you also are asking about rinsing microworms but they are fine used directly after scraping them off the sides of their culture container. They may even transfer eatable micro-organisms in the process that the larval cats can eat but that is only conjecture.

Posted: 24 Dec 2006, 16:04
by bronzefry
Larry,
I had troubles with live baby brine shrimp and the decaps in the past. I lost a batch of C.paleatus juveniles. They ate well, but suddenly died. I did the daily water changes, etc. The only thing I did differently was the food. I changed back to the frozen baby brine shrimp and crushed flake food. I've had (4) batches of fry(aeneus and paleatus) since then without incident.
Amanda

Posted: 24 Dec 2006, 16:50
by apistomaster
Hi Amanda,
I always did alright with bbs with albino and regular aeneus or paleatus. Only when I began raising Cory sterbai did I run into my troubles.