09/12/2020
Shrimp Dinner
Complete food (main food) for ornamental shrimp
Shrimp Dinner is a well-balanced daily main food for your ornamental shrimp containing all the important nutrients, vital substances and natural vitamins they need for healthy development, successful moults, growth, brilliant colours and high reproductive rates. Our special recipe and the way we manufacture our shrimp foods guarantee that your shrimp still find this food tasty even after some time in the water, it is thus completely eaten.
The ingredients of Shrimp Dinner are 100% natural.
Shrimp Dinner
Ingredients
Pads/Gran
Chlorella algae, protein extracts of vegetable origin, squid, fennel, yeast extract, Asian cabbage, amino acids, algae extracts, lecithin, mustard seed
Pearls
Chlorella algae, vegetable by-products, protein extracts of vegetable origin, squid, fennel, yeast extract, Asian cabbage, amino acids, algae extracts, lecithin, mustard seed
Analytical Constituents
Pads/Gran: 33.1% crude protein, 2.3% crude fat, 8.3% raw fibre, 8.9% crude ash, 6.9% moisture
Pearls: 23.17% crude protein, 1.61% crude fat, 5.81% raw fibre, 6.23% crude ash, 4.83% moisture
Shrimp Dinner Pearls
Feeding recommendation
Pads 1-2 x a day 1 pad per approx. 25 shrimp
Gran 1-2 x a day approx. 1 granule per shrimp
Pearls 1-2 x daily 1 Pearl per approx. 15 Shrimp
We recommend with renewed feeding to wait until the pads / granules / pearls of the previous feeding were completely eaten.
Contents and their effects
• Chlorella algae
The unicellular freshwater alga Chlorella vulgaris is an excellent nutrient carrier for shrimps. Even though it is costlier than Spirulina algae it has won out over the latter due to its beneficial properties. Many successful breeders have been feeding Chlorella algae for years. The following analysis shows the wide range of essential nutrients contained in these algae that shrimp need to stay vital, colorful and productive.
Nutritional value Minerals and trace elements Carotenoids and chlorophyll
water 3 - 5 g / 100 g potassium 1000 - 2300 mg / 100 g carotenoids 50 - 200 mg / 100 g
minerals 6 - 9 g / 100 g magnesium 300 - 460 mg / 100 g lutein 70 - 120 mg / 100 g
protein 45 - 55 g / 100 g calcium 250 - 600 mg / 100 g chlorophyll 2.5 - 4.5 g / 100 g
carbohydrates 30 - 35 g / 100 g iron 50 - 260 mg / 100 g
fibre 15 - 26 g / 100 g manganese 3 - 10 mg / 100 g
fats 8 - 13 g / 100 g zinc 5 - 15 mg / 100 g
calorific value 1350 - 1500 kJ / 100 g copper 1 - 3 mg / 100 g
iodine < 70 µg / 100 g
Vitamins (excerpt) unsaturated fatty acids (excerpt) Amino acids
vitamin B12 100 - 260 µg / 100 g oleic acid 350 - 650 mg / 100 g The range of amino acids
comprises all proteinogenic
amino acids, including
all essential amino acids
vitamin K 0.3 - 0.5 mg / 100 g linoleic acid 1100 - 2300 mg / 100 g
vitamin E 8 - 11 mg / 100 g alpha-linoleic acid 1550 - 3200 mg / 100 g
vitamin C 10 - 30 mg / 100 g
Additional value of Chlorella algae
Besides their impressive nutritional value, Chlorella algae also have further positive functional characteristics like e.g. their ability to bind toxic substances/heavy metals, which can then be excreted through the intestine easily and quickly. Especially invertebrates like our ornamental shrimps, which do not have a liver, can run into severe problems when toxic substances accumulate in their system. Chlorella algae contain chelating agents, i.e. they form complexes with toxic substances/heavy metals through adsorption, which are thus prevented from accumulating in the body.
• Squid
Snails and other molluscs belong to the natural food range of shrimps in the wild. They provide a great source of vital proteins and amino acids, but first and foremost, molluscs contain glucosamine (an amino sugar). Crustaceans require this substance for the formation of their exoskeleton. We have chosen squid as a source of these essential nutrients for our shrimp food recipe.
• Fennel
Fennel is globally used as vegetable, condiment or medicinal plant. Even in ancient Chinese medicine, fennel was held in high esteem. It has also proven its value as a shrimp food ingredient. Fennel contains a great amount of secondary plant substances, which have a very positive effect on shrimps.
Fennel contains
the essential oils anethole and fenchone, bergapten, boron, camphor, carvon, chamazulene, citral, citronella, coumarin, eugenol, flavonoids, fumaric acid, caffeic acid, limonene, linalool, linoleic acid, myristicin, psoralene, salicylate, thymol, tocopherol, trigonelline, umbelliferone, xanthotoxin, vitamin C
Fennel is also very rich in highly available minerals.
• Asian cabbage varieties
For Shrimp Dinner, we only use the most favorite cabbage varieties used by Japanese shrimpkeepers and -breeders. Their content of vitamins, proteins, amino acids, minerals and secondary plant substances is far above average, which makes these cabbages so popular in Japan. They contain more vitamin A, vitamin C and vitamin K, more folic acid, calcium, potassium, magnesium and iron as well as more omega-3 fatty acids and fibres than other vegetables, antioxidative secondary plant substances as well as high levels of chlorophyll.
• Amino acids
Amino acids are the basic components of life itself. Only 22 amino acids are necessary to form around 100,000 different proteins. Protein is one of the main components of a shrimp's body, with around 20% of the total body weight.
Amino acids are necessary for the formation of proteins. They are not only used for building muscle tissue, organs, cells, for repairing tissues and so on, but they also form antibodies against bacteria and viruses. Moreover, they are a part of the enzymatic and the hormonal system, form the nucleoproteins (RNA and DNA) and transport oxygen through the body.
• Lecithin
One of the substances necessary for a functioning nervous system (ganglia) is phosphatidylcholine, better known as lecithin. Lecithin belongs to the group of phospholipids, which are an important component of cell membranes, amongst others those of nerve cells. Phospholipds are not only mecessary for transporting ions through the cell membranes, but also isolate the dendrites (or nerve endings), thus making sure nerve impulses are transmitted securely. A shrimp transforms lecithin into acetylcholine, the most important neurostransmitter of the nervous system.
• Mustard seed
The most important active substance contained in mustard seed is mustard oil. This oil only forms after a chemical process that takes place when the mustard seed is ground and then mixed with water. The sinalbin and the sinigrin that form during this process give mustard its keenness and have an appetising effect. These secondary plant substances also further digestion and are efficient against bacteria.
Shrimp Dinner Pads/Gran is available in a 70g screw-top jar.
Made in Germany
Now Available at Bin Bon Aquarium