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COurgette/kumara - plecos (royals mainly)


henward

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i have a cactus, sailfin, blue phantom, royals and BNs in the tank.

i awhile ago, i fed courgette, THEY LOVED IT, demolished it and went nuts, i mean... it was almost instant attraciton.

then i tried kumara, after demolishing that. the big polka dot and my blue phantom looked EXTREMELY full.

then they stopped eating, bloat - then death 5 days later.

any reason for this? the salfin was fine.

was it maybe they ate too much?

should i have cooked the kumara?

any other experiences like this..

reason i ask is that i really wanna feed courgette to royals, everyone says how much they love it, but im quite weary of it cos of that.

should i blanche, is blanching for hygiene or digestibility?

i dont have to feed kumara, im hapy with courgette, they seem to strip the skin off first! then the qhite flesh.

questions

1) should i blanche courgettes?

2) how long should i leave the courgette for?

3) do they eat the seeds or just the outer layers?

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why would kumara do that?

i remember, the large polkadot pleco was the most voravious with the kumara, i mean, it demolished it!

gaping chunks were taken out of the kumara.

wonder why it would bloat them?

usually they scrape the toplayers off,

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Could there have been some sort of spray on the kumera? Perhaps it has too high a sugar or starch content and they had a diabetic attack :dunno:

Blanching is usually required for a tough green like cabbage as it breaks down the cellulose or something so it is digestible. Not a requirement with courgettes.

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Most species of animal have specialised bacteria that reside in the gut that are critical to the digestion the foods that we eat. This is a much bigger deal for the animal's overall health than previously thought.

I personally have noticed increased death rates associated with feeding too much of a fresh food when the fish isn't accustomed to it so my advice would be to introduce new foods slowly. I don't know of any studies determining how fast intestinal bacterial populations establish in fish, but in other monogastric animals, it can take at least a couple of weeks.

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Also I believe sweet potato as referred to by Americans and English is more like the orange flesh/beauregarde type kumara than red skin/yellow flesh type that is more common. The orange one is easier to digest and is more moist, less fibrous.

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I thought the advice was to feed a small amount, and then remove it after a day or two so it doesn't pollute the tank though I've tended to leave it in till it's gone.

That's to find out whether or not they will eat it at all. If you know they will eat it, and you're trying to stop them bloating (and dying), then small amounts at a time is best.

I thought blanching was done so that the courgette sinks. Otherwise it floats.

Yes, but some people think it kills off some harmful stuff too.

IMO fresh is best. Straight out of Mum's garden (Then run like hell when she finds out :slfg: )

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i tried one courgette, couple days later tried orange kumara.

its almost as if they found both irresistable. i mean...

its like they just guard it and keep grazing, thats how much they loved kumara lol

but sadly, i believe it was to their end.

the courgette was the same, in less than 1 hour, i went back and there wa sno green left.

the blue phantom was most prevalent with the courgette, and my big polka dot was absolutely crazy for the kumara. (geoff, sadly it was the one i got from you!!) i was so gutted. that was my most active pleco in the tank - i was away in queenstown when fraser (fruju) discovered it &c:ry

i guess, i am angry at myself, wafers were working so well!

and to try something new, i figured variety is good.... and this has come from it.

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i am actuall scared to feed courgettes, cosw i know they will demolish it, and if same thing happens, then i lose a couple - thats gutting

or you could just put in less.

I usually dump in about half of one, sliced up, at a time. Nothing left by the next day.

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Try putting in several smaller pieces across the front of the tank. I used to feed three pieces (about 1/3 of a courgette each) so that each of the three blues could eat without fighting over it. Give it a go, but invest in a couple of old forks and some nylon first, makes retreaving them so much easier!!

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Also I believe sweet potato as referred to by Americans and English is more like the orange flesh/beauregarde type kumara than red skin/yellow flesh type that is more common. The orange one is easier to digest and is more moist, less fibrous.

This...

Sweet potato for me was always the gold or orange type.

Red kumara was completely new to me upon arrival in NZ

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