How much Nori is too much Nori ???

My lot get ½ a sheet per week. The main consumers (3 tangs, 2 large damsels and an angel) get through it in about ½ an hour if I have just fed them anyway or about 10 minutes if I have not. The frozen mix I made up and feed the rest of the time includes about 50% volume of seaweed, made up of 5 varieties fresh seaweed, 3 freeze dried varieties plus nori so the nori on a clip is just a weekend treat.

They sometimes pull it out of the clip and it will snag in a coral, or several, until they have got it finished.

Steve
 
yeah randy i get mine at publix in their seafood section. I need to check out an asian store downtown i heard you can get loads of it cheaper there. I feed my guys a sheet a day thats wrapped in romain lettuce!
 
Hey that's a good idea to wrap it with lettuce - so that forces them to eat some lettuce in order to get to the nori?

I'm going to check out the asian markets as well. I know whenever we go for sushi my wife gets a seaweed salad. That would probably be some good stuff for the tangs too.
 
I like wrapping nori around a rigid airline tube and securing it with a couple small rubber bands (or one bigger band as in the picture) - it makes the fish work a bit harder to get the algae off and makes it unlikely that they can rip off much more than they can fit in their mouths at once (sailfin tang, rainfordi goby).

You can see what I mean:


5506rainfordi_with_algae-med.JPG


jayo
 
Great picture - I'm going to try that. So your rainford eats nori??? I have one but it doesn't show any interest. It just sifts sand all day. But it is so shy I can't imagine it getting in the tussle created by the other fish going after the nori...
 
Does anyone soak theirs in supplements? Sometimes I soak mine in Kent Zoa vitamin liquid and a couple of drops of garlic extreme...
 
That's a great idea Jayo. How long does the nori last on the air line? I like the idea of not having to put my hand in the tank every time I add more nori to the clip.
 
Here's what I did (I don't even think this was my idea - might have seen it in a RC post several years ago?):

I had a closed loop return pipe running above the euro-brace of my acrylic tank - I used this to brace the rigid airline. I took a long piece (maybe 12 inches long or so) and gave it a right angle bend in the middle (I think I stuck the tube in near-boiling water until it was soft enough to bend easily - it has been awhile :) ). on the end that sits outside of the tank, I made ridges with rubber bands (rubber band 'donuts') around the tube so that when the tube was fit underneath my closed loop plumbing, the rubber bands were right outside where the pipe was and held the airline in place. The other end went over the lip of my euro-brace and dipped into the tank water.

to load the 'clip', I would first rotate the airline up so that it pointed at the top of my canopy instead of the bottom of my tank. I would pull off any gross slimy remains of yesterday's nori.

I usually used half of a big sheet of nori from the Asian grocery - probably around 5x8 inches? for my 6" sailfin tang (the rainfordi ate some, but an insignificant amount compared to the tang - I had green chromis and they loved to pick at it as well). I folded the half sheet in 'half' lengthwise, so that I ended up with one long strip about 3x8. I then dipped this sheet of nori in the tank so that it would start to soften. Then I wound it around the bottom of the airline tubing tightly, and wrapped the rubber band around like shown in the picture above. I had best results when the rubber band covered a wide area of the nori (like in the picture) or the tangs will be able to grab giant pieces, which they inevitably drop as uninteresting so they can get stuck on your overflow teeth.

I usually then left the nori pointing up while I did other tank feeding - I liked to let the nori soften from the wetting before giving it to the fish. then I rotated the airline down into the tank.

At first you'll notice that your fish are having a lot more trouble getting the nori off the clip - with fewer 'edges' to grab and yank, they can't really get the nori off most of the clip until it softens up (a few minutes). I regarded this as a plus. As it softens they'll be able to grab small bites. As a result, the nori lasts longer on the clip and gives your fish more to do during the day as they fight with the stubborn nori.

I don't know if my rainfordi was 'normal' in his nori appetite or not. He did not attempt to compete with the tang for food - he waited until the tang's interest in the clip died down (10-15 minutes) before he'd venture out to grab his mouthfuls. The tang would then of course swim over to pretend interest in the algea again (taking a bite that he would likely spit out on the other side of the tank - pig), but the rainfordi would duck away for 10 seconds and then come right back to the clip. I'd be interested to know if anyone else sees their rainfordi eat nori or if mine was an adventurous eater.

jayo
 
Oh, and the nori lasted all day - about 2/3 would be eaten in the first 15-20 minutes of desperate starved munching :rolleye1: and the rest was picked at halfheartedly throughout the day.

jayo
 
I roll my nori into a cigarette shape. I try to roll it a tight as I can. I then rubber band the nori to a small riece of lr and drop it into the tank. it usually lasts a whole day.
 
I cut the whole pack into approx 1x1 squares and feed by hand, for the fish that are more shy I just rub it together between my fingers and turn it to Nori flake. Do it a few times a day, beats messing with any kind of cliping irritation. Fat fish....
 
I tried wrapping it tightly around an acrylic feeding rod and that worked well. I used half a sheet and it lasted a long time because the fish were not able to tear large pieces of it. Then got smaller bite sized pieces instead. I think this willl be my new feeding method for nori...

Do asian markets carry any other types of dried seaweed? I'd like to find an inexpensive source of some red seaweed or others that the fish might like. The regular groceries around here don't carry anything else though.
 
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