I frequently stay out of it when the subject of bloodworms comes up, or I might make a comment saying I've found they have their place and in personal experience they seem to stimulate spawning in some SA species-- I'm posting this in the CA/SA forum mainly due to the following: I've been aware of this article by Lee Newman for some time (if you're not familiar with him, he's a curator at the Vancouver Aquarium and is well known in cichlid literature for spawning difficult species of Satanoperca, Retroculus, etc.). Here's a quote:
Satanoperca daemon
"More recently, I've been in contact with a researcher at Texas A&M University who has spent time in the field studying the feeding behavior, and diet, of wild S. daemon. In personal correspondence, he described how in approximately 300 fish ranging in size from very small juveniles to full-grown adults the most significant food item was Chironomid larvae - bloodworms. He therefore suggested that bloodworms make up a significant portion of the diet of captive S. daemon. Evidently, the gut content research explains the enthusiasm S. daemon show toward bloodworms despite the list of objectionable qualities cichlid keepers often report with them."
And in a recent discussion, he shared this paper:
https://www.ijzab.com/files/publish/3. IJZAB ID No. 372.pdf?fbclid=IwAR0e9ljLDY6EURtQJ5V-9CZGjKyZr4iEkNfzg4GeItXXMURSRa5scGuPgc4
Satanoperca daemon
"More recently, I've been in contact with a researcher at Texas A&M University who has spent time in the field studying the feeding behavior, and diet, of wild S. daemon. In personal correspondence, he described how in approximately 300 fish ranging in size from very small juveniles to full-grown adults the most significant food item was Chironomid larvae - bloodworms. He therefore suggested that bloodworms make up a significant portion of the diet of captive S. daemon. Evidently, the gut content research explains the enthusiasm S. daemon show toward bloodworms despite the list of objectionable qualities cichlid keepers often report with them."
And in a recent discussion, he shared this paper:
https://www.ijzab.com/files/publish/3. IJZAB ID No. 372.pdf?fbclid=IwAR0e9ljLDY6EURtQJ5V-9CZGjKyZr4iEkNfzg4GeItXXMURSRa5scGuPgc4
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