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Paulo
11-23-2004, 07:49 AM
GOOD PROTEINS, BAD PROTEINS

Recent research shows that warm blooded animal proteins such as beef heart cannot be digested easily and it remains in the fishes' stomach and intestinal tract for long periods. These undigested proteins will rot and cause the manifestation of parasites and bacteria which will infect the fishes' internal organs. Some undigested proteins will then pass out as faeces and ammonia, fouling up the water and poisoning your fish.

Marine/fish proteins are the most suitable forms of proteins for fishes because they are the type of proteins as nature intended them to be. Fishes obtain their protein diet through other marine organisms be it from a shrimp, krill, seaweed or other fishes. That is why their digestive systems evolved to cater for maximum protein absorption from such meals in their natural habitat. Choosing the wrong type of proteins for your fish may do more harm than good, for instance feeding your fish with proteins that are difficult to digest (such as beef heart) may prevent the absorption of other required vitamins or trace elements due to the fact that the undigested proteins may have formed a layer around the intestinal tract of the fish, thus making it difficult for overall digestion and absorption of proper nutrients. Wrong selection of proteins in a fish's diet may result in growth retardation and low immunity against diseases due to malnutrition. [top]

ARTIFICIAL INGREDIENTS AND COLORANT
The colors in a fish are derived from pigment cells. Pigments like xanthophylls, melanin, carotenoids and phycocyanin produce colors like yellow, black/brown, orange/red and blue respectively. Carotenoids and xanthophylls cannot be produced by the fish, therefore it must come from their diet. The common practice of fish food manufacturers is to include artificial colorant or dye in their product. In all honesty, even though these artificial elements produce truly remarkable results, they wreck havoc to the endocrine and nervous system of the fish that consumes such food.

These colorings act as replacement for pigments such as carotenoid and not the carotenoid pigment itself. That is why we sometimes see fishes that have red linings even on their fins as the coloring is absorbed into the blood system. These coloured dye pigments also hinder the absorption of nutrients in the intestinal tract. That is why we often find heavily dyed fishes are stunted, less active and very often have breeding difficulties. A fishes that passes out red faeces is another indication of the artificial coloring being not digested due to the extreme amount of dye used. Another clear sign is that you will notice that the water in your tank and the silicone glue become reddish!

Some fish food manufacturers use hormones such as testosterone to trick the fishes' system towards early maturity to speed up the natural coloration process of the fish. If fed with such hormones, the fishes will immediately "mature" to have capabilities to possess color pigments. The end result would be having fishes that stop growing, become stunted and become sterile due to the false early maturity! It has always been proven and will always remain proven that natural nutrients from natural sources will be the safest and healthiest nutrients for any animal, not only for the fish! The best natural red colorant comes from the astaxanthin which derives from shrimps, krill or marine organisms. Astaxanthin is also an anti-oxidant which is ten times stronger than beta carotene and a hundred times stronger than vitamin E. Xanthophylls and phycocyanin are the natural color pigments for the colors yellow and blue/green respectively.
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Hey everyone,

I saw the above article at this site http://www.breederspremium.com/info.html, and I'm curious as to the veracity or Truth it claims. HOnestly, I'm more confused whether I should feed my discus with Beef Heart or not.

Could anyone share light on the above the article?

Your comment is highly appreciated. Many thanks!

Cosmo
11-23-2004, 09:22 PM
Bernard Degan say's don't because of the reasons cited in the article, also, says the fibers are too long (?) which makes it difficult to digest. That being said, many people on the forum feed their fish beefheart w/o apparent problems. I don't, mainly because every time I introduced it to them they wouldn't eat it... and it rots quickly in the tank too

Mine eat mostly live and frozen blood worms, live and frozen brine shrimp, and frozen brine shrimp plus ... the juveniles downstairs eat pellets and flakes as well but the adults upstairs are too spoiled and won't touch either

Jim