Fact of the Day



Fish in Winter

Fish don't go into a state of true hibernation in the winter, yet their metabolisms do slow down. Advice for fish in backyard ponds is to stop feeding entirely in November-December and to not resume again till at least March (or until the water temperature has reached 50 degrees F), and then to start with very low-protein, easily digestible foods until May or so. Fish become much less active in the winter, don't grow, and hardly need to eat. The only need that remains the same is that for oxygen, and when fish do die in the winter, it's often because their supply of oxygen is used up before the ice over their habitat melts.

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