New lion

joker205

New member
So I just picked up a 5 inch volition lion and he ate 2 mollys his second day and I was wondering what is mor healthy for him live or frozen food?
 
I used to have a lion a few years ago. I never ever fed live food just for the fact that most feeders I find are always unhealthy.
 
The key to a healthy lionfish is a good, varied diet of quality seafood. P. volitans is pretty easy to wean onto fresh/frozen foods, often with very little work on the keeper's part.

Here's a good article on feeding/weaning techniques:

Tools of the Trade: Equipment & Techniques to Convert your Fish onto Frozen.

You'll also want to red Frank Marini's excellent Lionfish Care Article.

The following is an excerpt from an upcoming lionfish article we have in the works:

Silversides are an excellent food since they are easily stuffed with pelletized food, powders such as spirulina, vitamins (C, B6, B12) or beta glucan, etc. One can also find many other frozen foods in the freezer at the local fish store (LFS), however, I find that a wider variety of fresher, high quality seafood is available at the grocery store or local fish market. Surprisingly, when purchased in small amounts, it is actually less expensive to feed your lions “people food” rather than “fish food”. Some of the foods we’ve had good success with are red snapper, salmon, tuna, cod, shrimp (uncooked, shell-on), lobster, scallops, clams, and squid. Try what’s on sale, try different foods to see what your fish find tasty. These foods can be cut up into bite-sized chunks, placed into bags and frozen for later use. If you arrange individual feeding bags, it is easy for a fish sitter to feed the fish should you be out of town for more than a few days for some reason.

Smaller specimens will also take mysis (we use Hikari and Piscene Energetics), and even brine shrimp (we use Hikari Brine Shrimp Plus). With the exception of one of our stingfish which eats PE mysis from a “pile” on the substrate, these foods are simply thawed, rinsed, and placed into the water column.

We’re often asked “how large should the chunks be?”, and although it depends on the size and species of the fish and its mouth size, if you stay right around the size of the fish’s eye or just a tad larger, you’ll never be wrong. If your fish happens to get a larger chunk than you had planned and seems to be “choking”, what the fish is actually doing is using its pharyngeal teeth to position and soften (deglutinate) the food item prior to swallowing. If this happens a lot, try giving the fish smaller chunks.


Whatever you do, avoid krill (frozen or freeze-dried) and any fish from the carp family (goldfish, rosy reds, koi, etc).

Finally, we feed our lions and other Scorpaeniformes 3x a week (M-W-F), and we feed until they have a little "belly bulge", but not until the fish is satiated. This goes a long way in preventing hepatic lipidosis (fatty liver degeneration) and also, since scorps are fairly sedentary, and have slow metablolisms, it helps prevent too much, or too large a food item from beginning to decompose in the lion's GI tract, which will likely kill it.

HTH
 
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Alright thanks for the information he is readily taking anything u put in the tank but I was wondering if u can ever over feed a lion or will they stop eating when they are full?
 
You can very easily overfeed a lionfish.
Stop feeding when you see a bulge in it's belly. ( between the fins) You'll know it when you see it.

Also, feed smaller pieces rather than one or two big pieces.
 
Alright thanks for the information he is readily taking anything u put in the tank but I was wondering if u can ever over feed a lion or will they stop eating when they are full?

Probably re-read the last paragraph namxas spent time typing up helpfully for you.
 
Ok so he looks really hungry for example when my finger hits the water he is right there and hes always begging so should I feed him or wait?
 
Ok so he looks really hungry for example when my finger hits the water he is right there and hes always begging so should I feed him or wait?

Healthy lions should always be hungry. They will learn to beg the instant they see you and can literally eat themselves to death. Like Recty said above, namxas really gave you all the poop on feeding lions. I'd print out his reply.
 
now i was wondering if a marron clown would be okay with him in there there is curently a bubbletip in there. the tank is 48L 14w 14d.
 
Volitans grow very fast and will soon eat any maroon Clown. As I've posted before; I had the biggest Maroon Clown I'd ever seen and assumed it was too big for the Volitans, it wasn't. A Volitans can and will eat fish at least 1/2 their size, maybe bigger. These huge meals can also kill the lion.
 
Volitans grow very fast and will soon eat any maroon Clown. As I've posted before; I had the biggest Maroon Clown I'd ever seen and assumed it was too big for the Volitans, it wasn't. A Volitans can and will eat fish at least 1/2 their size, maybe bigger. These huge meals can also kill the lion.

LOL...not at the loss of your clown, but at our little "private joke".

joker,

To be honest, 'nems do better without clowns bugging them, and there's no guarantee that a clown will live in the 'nem. Not to mention that Tuskfish isn't the only person I personally know of who has had a volitans eat a full-grown female maroon clown.

Lions can, and will eat to the point of regurgitation...not a good thing, and yes, they will beg, and beg, and beg some more even if they've been fed. Our pair of juvie fuzzies are about as bad as I've seen in the begging dept., followed closely by our P. mombassae. They're WAY worse than our volitans...
 
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