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You are currently browsing comments. If you would like to return to the full story, you can read the full entry here: “My brine shrimp hatched…now what?”.
Brine Shrimp are Sea Monkeys.
And feeding freshly hatched shrimp is the main point when they have the most nutrition.
“Brine shrimp have a fairly narrow window of high nutritional value. If one does not feed the shrimp to the the larvae within about 8 hours (8 hours is on the high side of the equation), the shrimp lose a significant percentage of the shrimp’s original nutritional advantage. The shrimp use that nutritional value for their own development as it was intended, but because of their rapid development, much of that value become waste into the water column. There are ways to compensate for that nutritional lose but the methods are more complicated and costly than simply feeding the nauplii within the eight hour window (a window that may narrow as the temperature of the shrimp hatching water goes up).”
(“‘(o.o)/”‘)
http://www.livefoodcultures.com/babybrineshrimp.html
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you need to feed them just a LITTLE BIT BUT IF THE WATER STARTS TO GET FOGGY YOU ARE FEEDING IT TO MUCH
http://www.livefoodcultures.com/babybrineshrimp.html
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The brine shrimp are meant to eat their egg shells but if they aren’t then some how feed them algee in a packet,bought at pet stores of aquariums, just small amounts.
http://www.livefoodcultures.com/babybrineshrimp.html
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