The issue lies in their digestive system and their metabolic system.
They have very inefficient and specialized digestive systems. By that I mean that they are incapable of pulling out all the available calories in a food item because their gut is incapable of breaking down certain nutrients and the nutrients they are capable of only get broken down at a very low percentage.
For instance, let's say that in comparison the human digestive system is extremely efficient and non-specialized and able to process 90-99% of calories consumed. I.E if you are to eat a 1200 calorie double cheeseburger, almost all of those 1200 calories will be consumed. Plus those calorie counts are adjusted for humans. Some of the fiber in the bun will not be processed and not count toward total calories. So, depending on the content, human waste may contain available calories depending on the gut of the animal that tries to process it.
Now, give that same cheeseburger, that supplied 1200 calories to a cow. A cow can process the fibers in the bun that humans can't, so those calories will be used and not wasted, however the calories in the meat, cheese and other items will be wasted and not used because the cow is incapable of stripping them. So now the waste from a human digesting a cheeseburger may have an available calorie count of say 50 calories. The cows waste from the burger will be extremely high because it couldn't process half of it.
So some people will tell you that proteins are proteins and fats are fats and and everything gets broken down to glucose anyway, but when it comes to a specialized feeder like a cow, an ant eater, a giraffe or a diamond goby, they have to eat certain things in order to get the calories they need to give them energy.
So efficiency wise, a diamond goby may only absorb 10% of the calories from a food source that it ingests depending on what It is. So they have to eat constantly in order to not starve. So just because you see an animal eat and poop, does not mean that it's meeting its nutritional needs based on the information above.
Does that make any sense? I feel like I rambled quite a bit lol.
I call BS on this.
Ive had a Diamond watchman for 6 months in a 75 gallon tank. I put him in the tank when it was 2 months old so there was nothing in the sand for him to eat. Yes he moves a A LOT of sand and burns a ton of energy while doing it. He also eats like a pig. Belly is full when I feed him mysis and he eats pellets on and in the sand. He is fat and has grown over 1 inch since I got him so he obviously is converting food into growth and not starving. Starving fish do not grow.
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