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Re: Adult Brine Shrimp Companion
Mollies are omnivorous. That would be the end of your culture. Why not try
some conch. A small one would do OK and once large would make some great
conch fritters or there may be a Cajun recipe out there for conch. Here in
Japan they usually slice them into sushi or grill them in the shell with
liberal dashes of sake and soy sauce for seasonning.
Ed
Tokyo Japan
>From: "William Shenefelt II" <wshenefelt at worldnet_att.net>
>Reply-To: killietalk at aka_org
>To: <killietalk at aka_org>
>Subject: Re: Adult Brine Shrimp Companion
>Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2001 17:52:03 -0400
>
>Mollies maybe??? They thrive in salt water and are generally plant eaters.
>I don't know if they would eat the brine shrimp or not but should do fine
>in
>the salt water.
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Stoecker,Michael,FRANKLIN PARK,NC&C"
><michael.stoecker at us_nestle.com>
>To: "'Killietalk'" <killietalk at aka_org>
>Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2001 5:21 PM
>Subject: Adult Brine Shrimp Companion
>
>
> > Hi,
> > Anyone have any specific species suggestions for any totally compatible
> > companions to the adult brine shrimp I am raising in a 55G plastic
>barrel?
> > I am leaning toward a marine snail to mow down the algae/mold/yeast
>complex
> > growing on the sides of the barrel. Perhaps this would make more
>infusorial
> > organisms available to the brine shrimp. I have a 28W CF fluorescent
>about
> > 8" from the water surface. This provides as much light as a 100W
> > incandescent bulb.
> > Other interesting invertebrate suggestions are welcome, but obviously
>they
> > shouldn't see adult brine shrimp as dinner.
> > Thoughts?
> > Thanks,
> > mike
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