Decapsulating Brineshrimp, Episode 72 pt3, LA Fishguys

Learn from the seventy second episode of LA Fishguys as Jim Stime of Aquarium Design in Thousand Oaks CALIF., discusses and shows you methods for decapsulating brine shrimp.

25 Responses to Decapsulating Brineshrimp, Episode 72 pt3, LA Fishguys

  1. hey S, sorry no, but whats wrong with SD ?

    Report Spam/Abuse

  2. nothing is wrong with san diego just people getting out of the hobby its looking grim. but i have hope i just keep moving forward.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  3. hey S, you should go to the LA Fisguys web site and get yourself signed up on the Service Co section. you would be the only one so far listed in SD.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  4. will try that out soon as get my site up and running thanks Jim

    Report Spam/Abuse

  5. this set up would work for raising clowns as well right?

    Report Spam/Abuse

  6. hey C, yes as a second food as Rotifers, which are smaller, preceed brineshrimp in foods for clownfish larvae.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  7. Another nice episode.

    You should do one on the “blue blubbers” looks cool.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  8. Those blue blubbers are awesome! Lets get some more vids of those please :)

    Report Spam/Abuse

  9. Hey Jim! I love your shows and I can’t wait for the next one. Also, please do a show about the blue blubbers, and what ever came of the original polyp ephyra tank inhabitants? I was kind of hoping to see you get stung…. Just kidding, Thanks again and keep the vids coming.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  10. hey B, i still have the Sea Nettle system and polyps. I have not been able to produce any yet, but when I do there will be a video of it… and I am sure one of me getting stung.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  11. He Jim, love the videos i was just woundering the Bio balls you use in your dry triccle filters are they simular to the ceramic rings that are available and do they produce the same results. Cheers

    Report Spam/Abuse

  12. hey K, while they both do the same thing the Ceramic Rings may technically have more surface area, but less void space.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  13. so simple but hard. LOL

    Report Spam/Abuse

  14. how many grams of brine shrimp eggs do you start with in one hatching vat?

    Report Spam/Abuse

  15. hey H, grams? you must think i am a scientist? not me. hec, i just increased from a capful to 1-1/2 capfuls in about 4 gallons of 50/50 FW/SW mix. aerate for 2 days and then seperate.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  16. Hey great vid. And great article in TFH!! Have you ever thought of raising daphnia?? I am told they are more nutritious and also easy on digestive tracts of certain fish. Would they be better for jellies?? Congrats on the article and your recent success with the two species of jellies. Looks great. Keep moving forward!! Thanx

    Report Spam/Abuse

  17. hey R, thank you. i have not considered Daphnia, hec i just figured out how to do brine shrimp :)

    Report Spam/Abuse

  18. LOL I bet your plate is full!

    Report Spam/Abuse

  19. TropicalFishAuction

    I personally think its a lot of work and a pain in the butt. I tried something similar but I thought it was just to much work and a mess.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  20. hey T, you get out of it what you put into it.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  21. A Frank&Stime production (joke).
    Thanks again Jim!

    Report Spam/Abuse

  22. TropicalFishAuction

    Have you tought or tried feeding them frozen cyclop-eeze instead of Baby brine shrimp?

    Report Spam/Abuse

  23. hey T, the whole point of decapsulating is the use of LIVE food that stays in suspension, whereas frozen foods ( non livng ) quickly settle on the bottom, and thats not where the jellies feed.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  24. TropicalFishAuction

    Maybe trying to make the non living food that would settle to the bottom rotate with current. This is someting I do with Wild caught seahorses when trying to ween them to non living foods. Then again the pressure from the current may hurt the jellies going towards the bottom.

    Report Spam/Abuse

  25. hey T, you are correct, the current is most important in a jellyfish tank.

    Report Spam/Abuse

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>