Interesting read for those who feed fish multiple times a day

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Interesting read! I've had a few CA cichlids that grew rapidly and grew large then died at what I thought was a fairly young age. At the time I blamed the warm water (was keeping CL's in another tank in the fishroom and it was hard to keep the other tanks under ~27C) for speeding up their metabolism, and partially still do. However, I think the quantity of food also played a big part, I'd say it is far easier to over-feed fish than we realise (and unlike the childrens book 'A Fish Out Of Water' they don't end up in a giant swimming pool only to be shrunk by the pet shop guy, they end up prematurely dead!)

At the moment the only cichlids I'm keeping are Geophagus altifrons, which AFAIK are designed for constant grazing rather than big meals. They're still sub-adults and I try to feed 1-2 meals a day (with the occasional day of fasting) of fine sinking foods so they can feed in their intended fashion of sifting thru the substrate (uneaten food scattered all over the substrate is most fishkeepers nightmare, but for geos its the best way to feed them!). I only feed quality flake and small foods like 1mm NLS Thera A, with the very occasional feed of frozen brineshrimp, and also try limit the quantity they get, which is sometimes difficult when you're trying to feed a big group of plecos too!
 
Great read and I agree with this. I feed my cichlids small amounts 3-4 days a week. I control sinking foods by adding little amounts at a time. I feed my omnivores algae wafers broken up in little prices first.
I have always believed over feeding leads to bloat and poor water quality.
Also I would like to add mammal meat is really hard for cichlids to digest. So many people like to feed beef hart and pinkies which is bad.


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I've been keeping my feeding down. I feed once 3 times a week. Also mostly NLS pellets.

Just an observation of what I've seen on forums and talking to some people on why people over feed:

1. Cichlids beg. Some people think the fish begs because it needs food.
2. Some people like to watch fish eat. Especially live food.

How I get cichlids to live over 10 years:

1. Quality diet, no over feeding.
2. Maintain the proper water temps per the species requirements.
3. Keep ph stable and what the fish need.
4. Good water parameters.

Do all the above and a cichlid should easily live over 10 years.
 
1. good genetics

Without that, even the cleanest water and the best of foods won't make a lot of difference. Unfortunately there are a lot of weak strains in the hobby, especially in the designer fish circles.

I would also add keeping fish in a low stress environment as another key to longevity and overall good health.
 
To the list of why many overfeed I'd add:
--In some tanks you get aggressive feeders and in trying to get enough food to shyer fish some overfeed the tank.
--Ignorant of a healthy body profile for some species, thinking a bulging belly after each feeding or a rounded body profile is normal or healthy.
--Those in the hobby impressed with the notion of 'power feeding' or trying to achieve fast or exceptional growth-- this produces (what someone may not recognize as) a factory farm mentality-- grow 'em fast and get 'em to market-- or a state fair, prize winning bull mentality-- instead of thinking in terms of health and life span the focus is on producing an impressive fish.
 
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