How goes it with lucky? Mine is doing extremely well. (Still no name yet) He's got a fat little belly on him because he eats like a pig. when i rinse the food cup in the tank i have to let him swim in to make sure he didn't miss any food. He's still not really big on cleaning other fish. I think he may check out a tang every now and then if the fish presents itself but he doesn't go looking for it. Almost like, i'm full, i don't need to mess with you. This is actually totally the opposite of what i was expecting. Then again, as we all have seen, every fish is different. I may have a lazy fish. I have several fish that are labeled "expert only" that i have had for going on 4 years now and are doing very well with one pair of wrasses breeding periodically. I in no way purport myself to be an expert but I have never hesitated to try a fish because someone stuck that label on it. And this may be a "Captain Obvious" statement but it all comes down to water quality and nutrition. I strive to keep my acropora happy, and with that comes the water quality. Long before my fish notice any issue, my coral are telling me that something is off. On nutrition, I basically just offer everything. My fish food bill is about 80.00 per month. I have never had a fish that couldn't find one item in my "shotgun" approach that it wouldn't eat. I offer 4 different frozen foods, one liquid food, one fresh item, usually clams or mussels, and Nori sheets for the tangs. Since the fish eggs seem to really be the only thing the cleaner seems to be interested in, I did look it up to see what its nutritional value is and i found that it is freshly harvested capelin
eggs without any additives, preservatives, or dyes. in researching further, this is actually a fish egg that humans also eat and the nutritional value seems to be very good at least in my opinion which is basically meaningless. lol Below is the breakdown. At this point he seems to be doing well with just the fish eggs but I will try to branch out to find others. As previously noted it does appear with this fish that food particle size is extremely important.
Just 1 ounce (28 grams) of fish roe contains:
- Calories: 40
- Fat: 2 grams
- Protein: 6 grams
- Carbs: less than 1 gram
- Vitamin C: 7% of the Reference Daily Intake (RDI)
- Vitamin E: 10% of the RDI
- Riboflavin (B2): 12% of the RDI
- Vitamin B12: 47% of the RDI
- Folate (B9): 6% of the RDI
- Phosphorus: 11% of the RDI
- Selenium: 16% of the RDI