Oak leaves, super food or final alternative?
Moderator: Mustafa
Oak leaves, super food or final alternative?
Lately there have been a lot of threads on leaf litter, particularly oak leaves. Who am I to swim against the current so I went out and got myself some leaves to experiment with.
Tank 1: Well established 10 gallon, lots of algae and surface area for bacteria. Huge colony of Cherries with a few Amano, Ghosts, Snails and Ottos. I only feed this tank occasionally as I enjoy watching the feeding frenzy.
Tank 2: Newly cycled 5 gallon tank, big plastic plant with some new algae growing on it. 10 Cherry shrimp and a couple of pond snails.
In Tank 1 I put in one oak leaf and over the past few weeks it's hardly been touched, In Tank 2 I put in 3 oak leaves and they're almost gone, pretty much skeletal remains of them. So are the shrimp I have picky eaters? You'd think with as many animals as I have in Tank 1 that one of them would have a taste for oak. I'll have to get some more leaves and experiment some more, but I find that given alternative sources they don't touch the oak leaf.
Ecir
Tank 1: Well established 10 gallon, lots of algae and surface area for bacteria. Huge colony of Cherries with a few Amano, Ghosts, Snails and Ottos. I only feed this tank occasionally as I enjoy watching the feeding frenzy.
Tank 2: Newly cycled 5 gallon tank, big plastic plant with some new algae growing on it. 10 Cherry shrimp and a couple of pond snails.
In Tank 1 I put in one oak leaf and over the past few weeks it's hardly been touched, In Tank 2 I put in 3 oak leaves and they're almost gone, pretty much skeletal remains of them. So are the shrimp I have picky eaters? You'd think with as many animals as I have in Tank 1 that one of them would have a taste for oak. I'll have to get some more leaves and experiment some more, but I find that given alternative sources they don't touch the oak leaf.
Ecir
Did you put *dry*, *brownish* oak leaves into your tank or fresh ones? It's highly unlikely that 10 shrimp can just take apart a whole oak leaf within just a few weeks. You might not have put an oak leaf in there but something that looked similar.
Badflash is right...the bacteria and other micro-organisms grow over time and are grazed upon by the shrimp as needed. So, you won't be seeing a ball of shrimp forming around the leaf.
Badflash is right...the bacteria and other micro-organisms grow over time and are grazed upon by the shrimp as needed. So, you won't be seeing a ball of shrimp forming around the leaf.
- The Fisherman
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Hmmm, interesting info guys. I was under the impression that the shrimp ate both micro organisms and the oak leaf itself. Thanks for the clarification.
Yep...Pond snails will eat almost anything. Mine ate cotton before... My bet would also be that the pond snails ate the leaves.
-John (AKA: The Puffer Ninja)
Yep...Pond snails will eat almost anything. Mine ate cotton before... My bet would also be that the pond snails ate the leaves.
-John (AKA: The Puffer Ninja)
Last edited by The Fisherman on Sun Sep 17, 2006 7:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- YuccaPatrol
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In my magnolia leaf tank, the ramshorn snails eat the leaves themselves, but the shrimp pick at the micro-organisms.
As much as I believe that leaf litter is an important part of our efforts to duplicate natural conditions for dwarf shrimp, I also believe that there is still a need for some supplemental protein in the form of commercial foods.
As much as I believe that leaf litter is an important part of our efforts to duplicate natural conditions for dwarf shrimp, I also believe that there is still a need for some supplemental protein in the form of commercial foods.
Yes, of course.YuccaPatrol wrote: As much as I believe that leaf litter is an important part of our efforts to duplicate natural conditions for dwarf shrimp, I also believe that there is still a need for some supplemental protein in the form of commercial foods.

- The Fisherman
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Ah ok, good to know. Thanks again for the clarification.Mustafa wrote:They actually do eat some tiny amounts of leaf, too, but nothing noticable. It also depends on the shrimp species, some eat more of the leaf, some eat less.The Fisherman wrote:I was under the impression that the shrimp ate both micro organisms and the oak leaf itself.
-John (AKA: The Puffer Ninja)
Ok, I just came home from work and it seems this has been a busy topic.
Let me clarify a bit:
The leaves I used WERE dry and brownish, I soaked them overnight before they went into the tank and if they weren't oak leaves then the oak tree I got them from is confused
.
The oak leaves have been in the tank for almost two weeks now, should be plenty of time for something to grow on them.
In the tank where the leaves are almost skeletal there are only 2 pond snails in with the 10 cherries, even if they were eating it that seems quite voracious.
In the tank where the leaf hasn't apparently been touched, there are at least a dozen pond snails, one apple snail, 3 ottos, 1 Ghost Shrimp, 5 Amano Shrimp a few generations of Cherries and one Bamboo. With a crowd like that you think the one leaf would disapear a lot faster then the three leaves in the small tank.
Ecir
Let me clarify a bit:
The leaves I used WERE dry and brownish, I soaked them overnight before they went into the tank and if they weren't oak leaves then the oak tree I got them from is confused

The oak leaves have been in the tank for almost two weeks now, should be plenty of time for something to grow on them.
In the tank where the leaves are almost skeletal there are only 2 pond snails in with the 10 cherries, even if they were eating it that seems quite voracious.
In the tank where the leaf hasn't apparently been touched, there are at least a dozen pond snails, one apple snail, 3 ottos, 1 Ghost Shrimp, 5 Amano Shrimp a few generations of Cherries and one Bamboo. With a crowd like that you think the one leaf would disapear a lot faster then the three leaves in the small tank.
Ecir
- Neonshrimp
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