Worms as food

Paul B

Premium Member
Worms, I love worms and if it were not for worms I would not have this hobby, thats how much I rely on worms(although I never tasted them myself)
I use two types of worms for food, California Blackworms and lately, white worms. Blackworms are fresh water worms and white worms live in wet soil. Blackworms only live for about 15 seconds in saltwater but my fish eat them very fast so they never make it to the bottom. Whiteworms are smaller and live for a few hours in saltwater.
Through experience I have realized that fish that are in excellent health do two things, they spawn and they don't get sick. So if a fish is not spawning or exhibiting spawning tendancies, it is not that healthy and is suseptable to a vast assortment of maladies including ich. ( just see how many ich threads there are) A fishes immune system is much different than ours and fish make antibodies in a few different places in their body, one place is in their slime secreting glands. We sweat, fish exude slime. The slimier fish such as mandarins and eels are more disease resistant than less slimier fish such as tangs. More slime equals more antibodies.
Anyway, to get a fish into spawning condition is not simply to have them spawn so we can raise the fry. My fish spawn frequently and I have not raised any babies in many years but the fact that the fish are spawning is an indicator that the fish are in the best shape they will even be in.
I don't want this to be a discussion on ich or diseases, as that has been done to death and if you don't believe that spawning fish don't hardly get sick, start a new thread titled "Paul B thinks that if your fish are spawning, you have to step on them to kill them" or something like that.

Back to worms. Worms for some reason greatly aid the fish into getting into breeding condition. Why? I have no idea, but when I used to raise freshwater fish fifty years ago, blackworms are what I used to get the fish into condition. When I got my first saltwater fish in 1971 I also used live worms and I had blue devils spawning every few weeks for seven years, and that was before most people even knew salt water fish could be kept at home. Some fish will live for many years on flakes and pellets and some, such as clownfish and some other damsels will even spawn but for most fish a more nutritious diet is needed.
I realize that flakes today are better than many years ago but flakes are baked to dry them. Anything dry can not have the nutrition of moist food because many vitamins do not take to drying and the oils that I feel are the most important are lost during the drying process. There is also a reason that flake food, or any dry food lasts for months, there is not much to go bad in them. White flour can be kept forever for the same reason which is the reason it is always fortified with vitamins and minerals, if it were not fortified, it can not be called food because it is just paste. Think about that.

A fish is a cold blooded animal and like all cold blooded animals can go for long periods of time with no food. They don't waste calories as we do just trying to keep our body temperatures warm. Fish don't have to because the ocean where they live is already at the perfect temperature for them. We move around a lot in different temperature locations so our body has to regulate our internal temperature for us and that takes up most of the calories we eat. A large fish such as a shark can go almost a year without food.

Live worms (or live fish) supply the freshest assortment of nutrients that our fish need to not only live, but to spawn. Live saltwater fish are the best food but are not available to us as a fish food but the next best thing is live worms. When a fish produces eggs (as "all" healthy female fish do) the fish needs much more calories than it does when it is just living. If you have ever filleted a pregnant fish, you will see that the eggs can be half the weight or more of the fish. To produce these eggs the fish needs more nutrition, much more and in the correct proportions of fats and proteins. Fish egggs are mostly oil and it takes a lot of calories and fat to produce all that oil. This is a huge burden on a fish but in the sea they have plenty of fresh food and they eat it all day, not just in the morning or whenever we decide to feed them.

Also live foods provide nutrients that they can't put in dry foods because much of those nutrients are constantly produced by a living body and used up by that body.

I use live blackworms every day along with clams and mysis to feed my fish. Virtually all of my fish are spawning except my copperband butterfly, one watchman gobi that doesn't have a mate, a cardinal without a mate as I have five of them and the pairs are spawning and my Shrimp gobies as one of them is very young.
The rest of my 20 or so fish are spawning and disease free. Along with my mandarins even my 19 year old fireclowns are spawning. These fish have never had any diseases including ich and I add fish from the sea along with bacteria in the form of mud, seaweed, amphipods, copepods and anything I consider interesting.
I am not talking about being disease free for a year or two, I am talking over 30 years.

Recently I have added whiteworms to the menu as a test. I bought a starter culture a few weeks ago on line and now I have millions of the little suckers. I keep them in a plastic shoebox in potting soil and feed them matzo's. I am not Jewish and am not sure if my worms are but I find Matzo's great at raising worms, but they will eat just about anything including crackers, cheerios, bread, Alpo SPAM, linguini and clams, hamburger helper etc. I use Matzo's because I can lay it flat on the soil and I like to add a few drops of fish oil to them. (I try to get fish oil into anything I feed) In 2 days the worms will eat a 2"X2" piece of Matzo (or cracker) with fish oil on it.
When the cracker is almost completely finished there are so many worms on it that you can't see any cracker. I remove those small pieces and put them in a little fresh water and stir it up. The worms do a little Macarana dance and seperate from the cracker and I can remove the piece of cracker and just have worms.
Those worms are tiny, less than 1/4" and very skinny. My copperband and most of my fish can't even see them which is what I want because the copperband and other larger fish are busy eating the larger live blackworms so the white worms fall to the substrait where they do that macarana dance again attracting my smaller fish such as mandarins. My mandarins are normally fed live baby brine shrimp and they are spawning so they don't really need the extra nutrition but I just love to see the smile on their faces when they see tiny live worms.
My mandarins are so happy that when they think I am not looking even they start doing that Macarana dance. :dance:
A little video eating worms
 
Good read, only time I use "worms" is for fishing the lakes. Your fish look very happy and healthy, good luck with white worms.
 
If you look closely, you can se little smiles on their faces. That larger fireclown is 19 and every fish in that video is spawning except the copperband. Of course most of the fish are in the back and didn't get up yet.
 
i LOVE black/blood worms for my freshwater tanks. i haven't had a picky eater yet that didn't go crazy for them.

it is nice to see that they are considered just as tasty in the marine world.

do you soak your worms or "gut load" them in any way? i soak my worms in garlic before i feed at somewhat erratic intervals in the hopes that it does something helpful (besides make my tank smell like italian food, and keeping vampires in check)
 
I don't gut load worms but I do feed the whiteworms matzo's with fish oil on it.
Bloodworms are not really worms and are not so good for saltwater fish as they would lack oils.
Just my opinion.
 
Paul... is this another one of those threads? ;)

I have a friend that uses worms in his tank also. I have frozen ones (yeah I know) and my fish do not even touch them.
 
Paul... is this another one of those threads?

I have a friend that uses worms in his tank also. I have frozen ones (yeah I know) and my fish do not even touch them.

Another one of what threads? A Paris Hilton thread? Thread about wasps?
Army stories? Other stuff I make up as I go along? What?
If your fish don't eat worms, they just don't like you. Did you ever go fishing using worms? You caught fish didn't you? Fish love worms. Maybe yours are just being difficult or have a social disease. Maybe they never saw a worm. :confused:
 
Yeah... that is what I thought...

I mean we can talk about army stories, there are a lot of worms in there.

I have no problem fishing for fish with worms...

I think mine just like escargot better!

Now some mysis... they love... maybe I spoiled them.
 
somebody said army stories?
I only know Viet Nam Army stories. We were not all dressed up and clean like you guys.:beer:
And you are a Drill Sgt, so you can most likely beat me up or at least make me do pushups. But not to many :lol:
Besides I would have so much time in rank now that I could probably be a four star general.
 
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Yeah, I want to be like Eisenhower, 5 Star General but without all the work, war and all that.
 
Alright Paul,

So after reading this, probably your 14th discourse on blackworms, I finally decided to give them a shot. I bought some from the LFS today and threw in a few to see what happened. I was quite surprised by what I saw.

The first few worms I threw in, no fish ate them. I kept putting in about 3 or 4 at a time, and the fish were very hesitant to eat them. The cardinal was the first diner, followed by one the clowns, finally the squami decided to get in on the action, and lastly one of the bartletts. The tang didn't want any (maybe he's full, been munching on nori all day), the damsel didn't want any, and the mandarin was nowhere to be found.

So it seems my fish aren't very interested at this point. I have a feeling they will warm up to them, a lot of it probably has to do with the fact that this is their 3rd feeding today and it came a little earlier than usual. But I thought you'd be interested in the results.
 
TimeConsumer, you are correct, that was probably my 14th discourse on worms, I jkust love them what can I tell you. I am sure your fish have the same taste buds as my fish but they probably never saw a worm before. I have been feeding them for fifty years so they really know what worms taste like. I also feed clams but they prefer worms. Your fish should warm up to them. If not, what can I tell you, I only report on what I know and don't advise on what youy should do. I am really surprised your tang didn't eat them, when I had hippo tangs they loved them.
I hope you didn't throw top many in at once as you know they croak almost instantly but my fish never let any hit the ground as you can see from the video.
I think if yours get used to them, they may not eat anything else which sometimes happens with worms.
 
I hope you didn't throw top many in at once as you know they croak almost instantly but my fish never let any hit the ground as you can see from the video.

I put around 4-6 in at a time. I don't think I put in more than 2 dozen during the whole feeding session. I'd say maybe half were eaten, the other I suspect will be chopped up by the powerheads and turned into coral food, no loss there.

I think if yours get used to them, they may not eat anything else which sometimes happens with worms.

Great, so my $50 in PE mysis that I have in the freezer will go to waste. Gumbo anyone?
 
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