FWIW I've lost a few copperbands even after eating. Fish caught using cyanide can continue to eat but suffer irreversable internal damage than does them in several weeks down the road.
FWIW I've lost a few copperbands even after eating. Fish caught using cyanide can continue to eat but suffer irreversable internal damage than does them in several weeks down the road.
Yes, this post was a bit in bad taste but look at it from the perspective of the buyer. I know I'd pay a little (key word here) extra for a CB that was eating frozen and adapted to life in a glass tank over one at a LFS that isn't eating.
FWIW I've lost a few copperbands even after eating. Fish caught using cyanide can continue to eat but suffer irreversable internal damage than does them in several weeks down the road.
Easy easy. All i'm saying is that this fish tends to die fast in the trade because it does not eat in captivity and some never wean on to frozen at all dieing to starvation. Most people will ask the LFS to feed this fish before purchase and most of the time the fish will not eat the frozen food.
I know some people that will pay triple for the asking price on this fish that will eat frozen. Would you rather pay extra to get a fish you know that will eat, then one that probably won't most of time? Same thing goes for mandarins, people tend to pay more for one that accepts frozen then one that starves without live food.
LOL i can't get over the fact how grimey this post is...you sell it at the same price because you want to offer a quality product, not crap that dies. Take pride in husbandry.
I think this has more to do with it than anything. I tried two Indonesian CBBs that both ate mysis voraciously, withered and died. My last attempt was an Australian fish. I had it for almost 5 years before loosing it to a pump failure.
Hey Doug, was your Australian fish the marginalis or was it a rostratus? I've been curious how the margined butterfiles do in captivity.