HOT WEATHER FISH FEEDING FACTS

Summertime provides the best time of the year to water garden –
and also to be on the alert for high-temperature problems.
To remain healthy and continue growing, fish need to get all the
nutrients available from their food, so feed them food they can
easily assimilate in their systems. If fish seem hungry, feed
them once to three times daily.

Feeding small amounts guarantees
all the food gets eaten, preventing leftover food from spoiling
in high, summertime temperatures and dirtying the water. Don’t
feed fish that aren’t hungry – it only wastes money and soils
their environment.
Oxygen dissolves easier in winter, when water temperatures are
low. Warmer temperatures mean harder-to-acquire oxygen in water.
In summer, therefore, fish sometimes find it difficult to get
enough dissolved oxygen – particularly in severe summer heat.
Even when fish eat, the motion caused by their feeding further
depletes oxygen supplies.
Avoid stressing your fish in the summer by feeding them in the
cool, morning hours of the day. And to increase oxygen in the
water, add a fountain or other aeration method to circulate and
add air to your pond water. Submergible plants also help to
increase the amount of soluble oxygen.
So, pay attention to your fish. The best rule of thumb is to
never give them more than they’ll eat in five minutes. Unlike
people (!), fish eat only what they need to survive, and as
water warms past 77 degrees Fahrenheit, your fish will eat less.

FISH FOODS
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