Does anyone feed their anthias capelin roe?

snorvich

Team RC member
Team RC
As the title says, does anyone feed anthias capelin roe? Or for that matter any other roe? If so, where do you get it?
 
I can't get mine to anything that isn't mysis or live brine shrimp. That said i tried flying fish roe wasn't even interested.
 
I can't get mine to anything that isn't mysis or live brine shrimp. That said i tried flying fish roe wasn't even interested.

Mine will eat mysis but I was trying to expand their horizons for diet. Mine will eat capelin roe, but I don't remember where I got it.
 
Some local folks here go fishing, and will feed their fish roe from yellowtail.
 
Roe is a great food for fish, especially when trying to get them to spawn. Think about it, you want your fish to make eggs, feed them eggs..
 
I dunno, aren't they kinda fatty?
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I believe that whole Capelin has a good nutritional profile - but I can't speak about the roe itself. The Monterey Bay Aquarium uses it in numerous diets, especially with the penguins. My understanding is that it has a lower fat content then what many penguins are dining on in the wild. This works out well for animals in captivity that aren't using up energy hunting food. Capelin is sustainably fished, so I think it is a good option.

I have fed the roe (taken from whole fish) out to numerous tanks and it definitely prompts a great response.
 
I believe that whole Capelin has a good nutritional profile - but I can't speak about the roe itself. The Monterey Bay Aquarium uses it in numerous diets, especially with the penguins. My understanding is that it has a lower fat content then what many penguins are dining on in the wild. This works out well for animals in captivity that aren't using up energy hunting food. Capelin is sustainably fished, so I think it is a good option.

I have fed the roe (taken from whole fish) out to numerous tanks and it definitely prompts a great response.

+1 to capelin being lower in fat compared to, say, herring. I don't know how it compares to tropical fish though. I've also never been able to find any info on the fat makeup of the eggs, but several nutritional facts pages like this one indicate that they are pretty low in fat compared to, say, blackworms. :D
http://www.clearwater.ca/en/home/products/masago/masago1/nutrition.aspx

Our penguins won't eat female capelin. They can actually distinguish them on sight right away and ignore them for some reason. Size? Taste? Dunno.

Anyhow, capelin roe is sold as "masago" at some asian food stores as a sushi garnish, but it's dyed and seasoned. Finding it undyed and unseasoned is tough, but I managed to track down packages of frozen female capelin at an Asian food store called Ranch 99 market here in the Bay Area:
photo-4-1.jpg

Females can be distinguished by the silver (instead of beige) bellies, smaller size, and reduced anal fin. These babies each have about a cherry sized chunk of eggs inside of them. Apparently you can buy processed masago and rinse out the dye and seasoning like in the linked thread above but I've never tried it.

My anthias and tons of other fish love them. I feed them to cardinals, chromis, butterflyfishes, etc. One of the big upsides is that the food is nice and encapsulated and won't foul or cloud your water. Once they're thawed you can keep them in saltwater in the fridge for several days without going bad.
 
If you're looking to expand their diet, my anthias ate raw shrimp, scallop, & clam chopped in bite size pieces much more aggressively than mysis.
 
Yup, my anthias will choke themselves on minced raw shrimp from the grocery store. On a side note, I was a bit confused about these shrimp. Regular "jumbo" shrimp from the grocery store... they were labeled freshwater. Is this normal? I asked the butcher, and he said yes, all the shrimp they sell are freshwater. Really?
 
Steve,

I'm curious as to where you found roe that wasn't dyed orange and seasoned? I've only been able to find capelin roe at asian markets but it has already been dyed.

I'm sure you've given it a whirl, but I've found that many of my fish really went for Nutramar Ova.
 
If you're looking to expand their diet, my anthias ate raw shrimp, scallop, & clam chopped in bite size pieces much more aggressively than mysis.

2+ for the diced raw shrimp. That has probably prompted the best feeding response for my anthias.
 
I make a bunch of finely chopped shrimp/clam/scallop with a cheese grater on the frozen meat--very quick and efficient. Then I rinse the mush in a baby brine shrimp net and feed out...
 
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