Clams, The Best Food for a Reef

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Paul B

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Octopus are also "probably " a great food and they are in the mollusk family like a clam. I also eat them but I am Sicilian and will eat anything. :rolleyes:

You can also feed the tenticles as long as you feed the rest of the animal
 
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jeffchapok

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I asked my wife to pick up some clams and what she brought home were pre-cooked and frozen in the shell. Would these still be beneficial or do I need to only use fresh clams?

I cut one up and fed it to the tank and the fish picked at it, but didn't go crazy like they do over raw fish when I feed that. I suspect it's because it was cooked and lacked the juices. If I pureed it, would it still be beneficial for my corals?
 
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No, eat therm yourself. Fish don't like cooked food and most of the nutrition will be wasted. Don't give it to your corals either.
 

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I am allergic to clams and dont have any hand strength right now. What if I hit one with a hammer in a Ziplock bag and then dump it in the tank?
 
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If you are using small clams that the fish can eat, I assume that would be fine but a lot of fish don't have the kind of teeth to tear out a live clam. Small clams don't require much strength to open. You can sit the thing on a strong table with the opening up. Put a dull knife in the slit and slightly hit it with a small hammer, pliers or your wallet.

You can also freeze it a little to kill it. Then put it in water for a few minutes to thaw it and it should open easy
 

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$0.53 at the fish market. I also got 1/2 pound of mussels for $1.29.

Does it matter farm raised vs wild? I'd imagine farm raised lives is horrible water.

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I am sure I will not find a wide selection here. We used to get fresh seafood here but like many things that has gone away.
I have a vise, a Sawzall and a selection of hammers. I will do this.
 

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atoll

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If a fish eats it in the wild it's good for them. It really is that simple. I don't think dried foods, flake or pellets are as good as the manufacturers would have you believe. I feed such maybe once a week or so which is OK and convenient just not as a good staple diet. I don't feed my fish hamburgers for that very reason and only ever have one once in a blue moon. I used to live not far from a fish market and bought all manner of fresh foods. I will still go there now and again to stock up but have to freeze most of it. I can buy live mussels here which many of my fish love especially my copperband butterfly. Other foods I buy from the fish market include squid, cockle, you call them clams, shrimp and prawns, fish roe, scallops among others. All these are purchased fresh and I process many if them then freeze as a necessity.
 

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If a fish eats it in the wild it's good for them. It really is that simple. I don't think dried foods, flake or pellets are as good as the manufacturers would have you believe. I feed such maybe once a week or so which is OK and convenient just not as a good staple diet. I don't feed my fish hamburgers for that very reason and only ever have one once in a blue moon. I used to live not far from a fish market and bought all manner of fresh foods. I will still go there now and again to stock up but have to freeze most of it. I can buy live mussels here which many of my fish love especially my copperband butterfly. Other foods I buy from the fish market include squid, cockle, you call them clams, shrimp and prawns, fish roe, scallops among others. All these are purchased fresh and I process many if them then freeze as a necessity.
Roe is eggs, correct? They sell that at the Asian market. The only thing with that is that my bigger fish won't eat small things.
 

atoll

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My Copperband feeding on an open muscle I feed daily. Many other fish also feed on it so the CB has to push it's way in.
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Clams, the absolute best food for salt water fish

The title says it all. If I could only feed one type of food, it would be regular, common, cheap, (near the coasts of the US) available, clams.

I myself feed clams almost every day to all my fish and have been since the 1960s. Virtually all the fish eat it, including mandarins, pipefish, queen anthias, moorish Idols etc. All invertebrates also eat it such as crabs, urchins, shrimp, anemones and coral.

Not only do they eat it, but it is probably the best thing they can eat just short of eating tiny fish which are hard to come by in the quantities we need. I have spoken to fish food manufacturers about this but apparently they are unavailable to them to make fish food out of, which is surprising as the sea is loaded with them.

Another great thing about feeding clams is that as the fish are chewing them, tiny pieces and juices come off and spread around the tank feeding the corals and filter feeders. I have never directly fed my corals, the clams do that for me. The microscopic particles also feed the pods, and I want as many pods as I can get. My tank is always filled with them which is how I am able to keep so many mandarins, pipefish, scooter blennies etc.

I copied this from an online source on shellfish nutrition:

5. Shellfish
Out of all the wonderfully nutritious organisms found in the sea, shellfish may be the most nutritious of all. Commonly consumed types of shellfish include clams, oysters and various others.
Clams are among the best sources of vitamin B12 in existence, with a 100 grams of clams supplying over 16 times the RDA! It is also loaded with other nutrients, including Vitamin C, B-Vitamins, Potassium, Selenium and Iron (25).

Oysters are also incredibly nutritious… with a 100 grams supplying 6 times the RDA for Zinc, 2 times the RDA for Copper, along with large amounts of B12 and Vitamin D - along with a plethora of other nutrients (26). Really, shellfish are among the most nutritious foods in existence. Unfortunately, people rarely consume them.

I buy the biggest clams I can find and here in New York; the bigger clams are the cheapest which is good news. I get the clams live and freeze them myself. Usually I buy them for myself to make clam chowder out of, and I keep some for the fish. A large chowder clam, about 4" long will last me a week or two as I also feed other things. A clam of that size is less than fifty cents. After the clam is frozen, I shave off paper thin slices depending on what I am feeding.

Most fish can handle a rather large piece of clam if it is shaved very thin. Copperbands especially love this food and try very hard to smile while they are eating them but the shape of their mouth makes it difficult for them.

When we feed clams we are feeding an entire animal, organs and all and being clams are filter feeders, their organs are loaded with the things fish are supposed to eat. If we feed table shrimp, fish fillets, octopus, scallop or squid, we are just feeding the muscle which is the least nutritious parts of those creatures. We as humans eat those parts, but fish need the guts.

Most of us also feed mysis and that is not a bad food but most of the frozen mysis we can buy are shell and that shell is not calcium and is not digestible so it just goes to waste. Looking closely at a single mysis, you can see more shell than anything else but a clam is all nutrition and will keep your fish in spawning mode. If you keep a natural tank, and if you can get your clams fresh, it will also keep your fish immune.

I eat them all the time myself which Is why I seem to be immune.

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Last edited: Today at 7:47 AM
Thanks for all the info. Do you clean? Or burp your clams before you throw them in the freezer?
 
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No, just throw them in.
 

When to mix up fish meal: When was the last time you tried a different brand of food for your reef?

  • I regularly change the food that I feed to the tank.

    Votes: 41 23.2%
  • I occasionally change the food that I feed to the tank.

    Votes: 60 33.9%
  • I rarely change the food that I feed to the tank.

    Votes: 56 31.6%
  • I never change the food that I feed to the tank.

    Votes: 16 9.0%
  • Other.

    Votes: 4 2.3%
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