Category:Live Food

This page lists the range of live food often fed to aquarium animals.

Live foods are foods that, as their name implies, are still alive. They are excellent for conditioning fish into breeding condition.

Some of the animals listed below are harder to get than others. Most are not for sale in your average aquarium shop and must be bought either from a local aquarium club, purchased online, or collected.

Once you get your live food animals, you do have the choice of trying to raise them for yourself or others in your neighbourhood. This is called culturing.

Brine Shrimp
Brine shrimp are probably the most popular live food and are often available from aquarium shops. They originate in extremely saline conditions, such as the Great Salt Lake of Utah. The male has two large claspers that are used to hang on to females when mating. They feed off of micro-organisms, but can be fed food commercially sold for them. Baby Brine Shrimp is newly hatched brine shrimp less than 24 hours old.

Daphnia
Daphnia also called water fleas are small freshwater aquatic crustaceans. They make excellent food for most fish.

Drosphila (Flies)
Drosophila are the larvae of the wingless or flightless fruit fly. Like the other live food, you can sometimes buy them from pet stores or you can culture them at home. More commonly sold by reptile shops.

Common house flies can be fed to your fish if they've not be caught by any chemical spray or sticky material.

More usual is to maintain a culture of wingless or flightless fruit flies. These 100% natural live food is eagerly taken by most top feeders. Typical species are Drosophila hydei (flightless) at long or the smaller wingless Drosophila melanogaster at  long.

These flies need to be kept in a humid environment (>65%) and around to remain active.


 * Culturing Fruit flies
 * Fruit fly food
 * Killii.co.uk - Culturing Fruit flies
 * Making Fruit Fly Food

Feeder Fish
Feeder fish are low cost live fish, usually Goldfish, Rosy Reds or Guppies, fed to animals such as large predatory fish, frogs, turtles, and other predatory aquatic or semi-aquatic animals. If you must feed your pet feeder fish it's best to rear your own, store bought feeder fish are often badly bred and may be carrying diseases.


 * Feeding live fish to another pet is illegal or disapproved of in some countries. Please check your country status.

Allowed or Approved of
United States of America, Canada

Not Allowed or Disapproved of
Great Britain, Ireland

Gammarus
Often called Scuds. these are a shrimp-like crustacean. It is an easy to culture live food that is an excellent size for many larger tropical fish. This crustacean reaches about $$ in length.
 * Culturing Gammarus - Scuds

Vinegar Eels
These are nematodes, similar to a micro worm (they're not an eel) and are typically used as fry food, raised in extremely acidic conditions, usually a condition of 50% water and 50% apple cider vinegar. Feed them small bits of apple. Vinegar Eels are about in length.

Vinegar eels live an average of 10 months, giving birth to as many as ~40 young every 8 to 10 days.

Vinegar eel are reported to live ~4 days in aquariums. Micro worms soon drown.


 * Culturing Vinegar Eels
 * Raising Vinegar Eels

Blood Worm
Bloodworm is a common live larvae insect feed to fish and amphibians. Commonly sold in aquarium shops. Live blood worm can harbor diseases or parasites that can be passed on to your animal. These can be mostly found among worms in water. They have similar body structure like that of mosquito larvae and are bright red in colouration while rest of the worms are pale or darker in colour. Dried bloodworms are found in frozen forms in various aquaarium shops. After feeding a notable change of stool is observed in fishes stool which mostly feed on live worms.

Black Worms
Black Worms (often called California Blackworms®) somewhat resemble tubifex worms but they are generally healthier to feed to aquarium fish.

In cultured conditions grows up to $$ in length.


 * Species - Lumbriculus variegatus
 * Not generally available in the UK and EU for some reason.


 * Culturing Black worms
 * Care of California Blackworms®

Micro Worms
These are tiny white worms (nematodes) (Panagrellus redivivus) up to 3mm in length (smaller than baby Brine Shrimp).


 * Caring for your Micro Worm Culture

Walter Worms
Similar but smaller than micro worms. But larger than Banana worms.
 * Caring for your Walter Worm Culture

Banana Worms
Less than half the size of micro worms and smaller than Walter worms for smaller fry, these are in fact a nematode.
 * Caring for your Banana Worm Culture

Grindal Worms
These worms are smaller relatives of the White worm. They are white in colour and they reach up to length. Being larger, they're often used to bring fish into breeding condition.
 * Species - Enchytraeus buchholzi

Cultivate exactly like White Worm. Grindal worms can tolerate a higher temperature than the white worms. Up to and mature at ~16 days


 * Grindal worms (bottom of web page link)
 * PDF paper on the Influence of low soil moisture on enchytraeids
 * How to Care for Your New Grindal Worms
 * Preparing for your Grindal Worm Starter Culture

White Worms

 * See Enchytraeus albidus

Flora

 * Vegetable food
 * Green water