Well, no. Though carrots are included, mostly from a color enhancing fish food that has carotenes, stabilized vitamin C, riboflavinoids, vitamin A, and some other goody. I thought I would try this instead of the usual 'regular fish food' thinking it interesting to see if anything changed colorwise and it backfired a bit. I had hoped for no change or enhanced color, and what I got was an increased orange in anything that would otherwise be amber or yellow. Other colors are unaffected. Last week I have switched back to an 'everyday' fish food.So are you saying you fed them carrots and the spots turned orange? I've fed them carrots and didn't notice a color change, I'll try it again.
Did the orange ever wear off?Hoping the orange wears off... I don't care for it.
I have found that once a color-enhanced roach reaches maturity the color is there permanately. But if the roach is still a nymph then the color wears off in two molts usually. This was most obvious on tiger hissers (b&w G.grandidieri) and a few others. With the tiger hisser case, the white had turned dark amber with the color enhanced foods, and with the corrected diet the dark amber turned back to white in two molts. Fully mature adults with the color remain non-white.Did the orange ever wear off?
Hi Matt,I have found that once a color-enhanced roach reaches maturity the color is there permanately. But if the roach is still a nymph then the color wears off in two molts usually. This was most obvious on tiger hissers (b&w G.grandidieri) and a few others. With the tiger hisser case, the white had turned dark amber with the color enhanced foods, and with the corrected diet the dark amber turned back to white in two molts. Fully mature adults with the color remain non-white.