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Walnut leaves

Featured Replies

Hey skf can someone with knowledge of botany and shrimp nutrition suggest to me if walnut leaves would be suitable for shrimp tanks?

Love n peace

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Hi @revolutionhope,

When I bought all my shrimp products from a lady moving back overseas, I had some organic dried walnut leaves: they are thinner than IAL and my shrimp loved them. I have to say that they were brown and dried, like IAL is prepared- not like your semi-fresh ones above that might contain terpenes or other unknown substances. I am not sure whether you can feed the walnut leaves like how people feed mulberry leaves...I have been tempted to get a few new ones, but was too scared that there might be a pesticide from wind distribution or car exhaust fumes on them, so unless it has a label on it, I am too scared of killing some shrimp...

  • HOF Member

Walnut leaves are apparantly safe to feed to shrimp. A group of us were having a discussion about a recipe that required walnut leaves but we couldn't find any near us. As Keenshrimp stated be careful of where they come from. If you are sure no pesticides have been used and the trees are not on a main road - preferably in someones back yard then they would be a good addition to their diet. Drying them in a cotton bag or pillow case and hung on a clothesline or any other area where a breeze can flow around them will stop mould appearing on them- I dry any surplus mulberry leaves this way all the time. If you are unsure of the safety of the leaves the only thing I can suggest is sacrificing a couple of culls in a container with a few leaves -you will soon know if there is anything undesirable on the leaves as the shrimp will be affected reasonably quickly -foam box would be ok  or any safe container that won't get too cold too quickly. Better to test on  a couple of shrimp than on your main tank- but generally if unsure best not to use.

Is there a list of other acceptable types of leaves somewhere? Or a thread with peoples' experiences with various leaves?
I've given my CRS, taitibees (including a few originally from Ineke's bunch!) and RCS leaves from my plum, peach, and cherry trees. They seem ok with it, but it'd be nice to have confirmation of some sort.

1 hour ago, Kaylenna said:

Is there a list of other acceptable types of leaves somewhere? Or a thread with peoples' experiences with various leaves?
I've given my CRS, taitibees (including a few originally from Ineke's bunch!) and RCS leaves from my plum, peach, and cherry trees. They seem ok with it, but it'd be nice to have confirmation of some sort.

Yeh this would be interesting as I have a variety of trees as @Kaylenna mentions knowing that they are insecticide free. I don't have a mulberry tree though. 

  • HOF Member

Mulberry trees are very easy to propagate. Just need a small piece to get them going. I have about 20 now from my original trees.. There is a list of leaves and flowers under food and nutrition. Even simple things like nasturtium leaves are eaten quickly by my shrimp. A pot with various lettuce varieties is a handy snack maker, growing your own kale and spinach or silver beet. Just a quick blanch and they love them.

  • Author

Hey and thanks for your input :-)

Just curious now though; does this mean that I shouldn't feed the green leaves or even yellow ones? Only leaves that have already gone brown and fallen by themselves?

Sent from my SM-N920I using Tapatalk

  • 6 months later...

They like fresh leaves. Just need to clean them and bleach them to soften them up.

I too would love a go/no go list for leaves. I would gather that oak leaves (poisonous to livestock) are not a good idea, but I have no idea how safety for mammals translates to invertebrates.

22 minutes ago, phopf said:

bleach

I don't know about bleaching leaves to soften them up.

I think maybe you mean, blanch them?

(Blanch = boil them for a short period of time.)

 

 

There are lots of posts in the Food & Nutrition section of the forum that discuss what can be fed to shrimps. You just need to spend sometime reading a few threads.

Walnut leaves... a reason I was kicked out of a group.

 

The only thing I know for sure is that the walnut leaves sold for shrimp are fine, but fresh walnut leaves from trees may be dangerous due to a toxin known as juglone. I do not know what the difference is between the two, only that I was removed from a group for asking about it.

 

 

(I also see this is a slightly older thread. Am curious if anyone knows what type of walnut leaves are sold for shrimp use)

yes, I am wondering what bizarre typo lead to bleach!

1 hour ago, phopf said:

yes, I am wondering what bizarre typo lead to bleach!

Damn auto correct..Lol

22 hours ago, Zoidburg said:

what type of walnut leaves are sold for shrimp use

I don't see many walnuts leaves being sold for shrimp use actually.

Most probably because it is toxic, as it is a form of herbicide. So even if it doesn't affect shrimp or fish, it might kill aquatic plants.

Best to avoid it.

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