Purina AquaMax 4000 Pond Fish Feed, 50 lb.

The Purina Aquamax Pondfish 4000 Pond Fish Feed is 100% nutritionally complete for omnivorous fish and was developed by professional nutritionists and fish experts. The pond fish feed is formulated as an easily-digestible, high-energy and nutrient-dense diet with an excellent conversion rate. This fish feed also has superior feed efficiency and supplements your pond’s natural food source.

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The Purina Aquamax Pondfish 4000 Pond Fish Feed is 100% nutritionally complete for omnivorous fish and was developed by professional nutritionists and fish experts. The pond fish feed is formulated as an easily-digestible, high-energy and nutrient-dense diet with an excellent conversion rate. This fish feed also has superior feed efficiency and supplements your pond’s natural food source.

  • 100% nutritionally complete and balanced diet for omnivorous fish
  • 3/16 in. particle size is suitable for many species of pond fish
  • 36% protein and 6% fat to support muscle growth, but not excessive fat of salmonid diets
  • Little waste and optimal feed conversion
  • Floating diet is easy to manage and designed to address overfeeding
  • High digestibility – Significant nutrient absorption means cleaner water
  • Highly palatable to help ensure proper consumption
  • Fish feed is ideal for catfish and tilapia
  • Store in dry and well-ventilated area protected from rodents and insects; do not feed moldy or insect-infested feed

Additional information

Feed Packaged Weight

50 lb.

Fish Type

Freshwater Fish, Catfish, Tilapia

Food Form

Pellet

Packaged Height

35 in.

Packaged Length

6 in.

Packaged Width

15 in.

Package Size

50 lb.

Packaging Type

Bag

Manufacturer Part Number

1470

4000 or variation, may refer to:

  • 4000 (number)
  • 4000 BCE, a year in the 4th millennium BC
  • A.D. 4000, the last year of the 4th millennium CE, a century leap year starting on Saturday
  • 4000s AD, a decade, century, millennium in the 5th millennium CE
  • 4000s BCE, a decade, century, millennium in the 5th millennium BC
  • 4000 Hipparchus, an asteroid in the Asteroid Belt, the 4000th asteroid registered
  • Mobro 4000, a barge operated by MOBRO
  • Weather Star 4000, a computer system used to display local forecasts on The Weather Channel
  • Hawker 4000, a supermidsized businessjet
  • Delta 4000, a rocket series
  • Audi 4000, a compact executive sedan
  • 4000 (District of Shkodër), one of the postal codes in Albania
  • 4000-series integrated circuits

50 may refer to:

  • 50 (number)
  • one of the following years 50 BC, AD 50, 1950, 2050
  • .50 BMG, a heavy machine gun cartridge also used in sniper rifles
  • .50 Action Express, a large pistol cartridge commonly used in the Desert Eagle
  • .50 GI, a wildcat pistol cartridge
  • .50 Beowulf, a powerful rifle cartridge used in the AR-15 platform
  • .50 Alaskan, a wildcat rifle cartridge
  • 50 Cent, an American rapper
  • Labatt 50, a Canadian beer
  • Fifty (film), a 2015 film
  • "The Fifty", a group of fifty airmen murdered by the Gestapo after The Great Escape in World War II
  • 50 (album), a 2016 album by singer Rick Astley
  • Benjamin Yeaten, widely known by his radio call sign "50", a Liberian military and mercenary leader
  • "Fifty", a song by Karma to Burn from the album V, 2011
  • 50 Virginia, a main-belt asteroid
  • Audi 50, a supermini hatchback
  • Dodge Ram 50, a compact pickup truck sold in the United States as a rebadged Mitsubishi Triton

A fish (pl.: fish or fishes) is an aquatic, anamniotic, gill-bearing vertebrate animal with swimming fins and a hard skull, but lacking limbs with digits. Fish can be grouped into the more basal jawless fish and the more common jawed fish, the latter including all living cartilaginous and bony fish, as well as the extinct placoderms and acanthodians. Most fish are cold-blooded, their body temperature varying with the surrounding water, though some large active swimmers like white shark and tuna can hold a higher core temperature. Many fish can communicate acoustically with each other, such as during courtship displays.

The earliest fish appeared during the Cambrian as small filter feeders; they continued to evolve through the Paleozoic, diversifying into many forms. The earliest fish with dedicated respiratory gills and paired fins, the ostracoderms, had heavy bony plates that served as protective exoskeletons against invertebrate predators. The first fish with jaws, the placoderms, appeared in the Silurian and greatly diversified during the Devonian, the "Age of Fishes".

Bony fish, distinguished by the presence of swim bladders and later ossified endoskeletons, emerged as the dominant group of fish after the end-Devonian extinction wiped out the apex placoderms. Bony fish are further divided into the lobe-finned and ray-finned fish. About 96% of all living fish species today are teleosts, a crown group of ray-finned fish that can protrude their jaws. The tetrapods, a mostly terrestrial clade of vertebrates that have dominated the top trophic levels in both aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems since the Late Paleozoic, evolved from lobe-finned fish during the Carboniferous, developing air-breathing lungs homologous to swim bladders. Despite the cladistic lineage, tetrapods are usually not considered to be fish, making "fish" a paraphyletic group.

Fish have been an important natural resource for humans since prehistoric times, especially as food. Commercial and subsistence fishers harvest fish in wild fisheries or farm them in ponds or in breeding cages in the ocean. Fish are caught for recreation, or raised by fishkeepers as ornaments for private and public exhibition in aquaria and garden ponds. Fish have had a role in human culture through the ages, serving as deities, religious symbols, and as the subjects of art, books and movies.

A pond is a small, still, land-based body of water formed by pooling inside a depression, either naturally or artificially. A pond is smaller than a lake and there are no official criteria distinguishing the two, although defining a pond to be less than 5 hectares (12 acres) in area, less than 5 metres (16 ft) in depth and with less than 30% with emergent vegetation helps in distinguishing the ecology of ponds from those of lakes and wetlands.: 460  Ponds can be created by a wide variety of natural processes (e.g. on floodplains as cutoff river channels, by glacial processes, by peatland formation, in coastal dune systems, by beavers), or they can simply be isolated depressions (such as a kettle hole, vernal pool, prairie pothole, or simply natural undulations in undrained land) filled by runoff, groundwater, or precipitation, or all three of these. They can be further divided into four zones: vegetation zone, open water, bottom mud and surface film.: 160–163  The size and depth of ponds often varies greatly with the time of year; many ponds are produced by spring flooding from rivers. Ponds are usually freshwater but may be brackish in nature. Saltwater pools, with a direct connection to the sea to maintain full salinity, may sometimes be called 'ponds' but these are normally regarded as part of the marine environment. They do not support fresh or brackish water-based organisms, and are rather tidal pools or lagoons.

Ponds are typically shallow water bodies with varying abundances of aquatic plants and animals. Depth, seasonal water level variations, nutrient fluxes, amount of light reaching the ponds, the shape, the presence of visiting large mammals, the composition of any fish communities and salinity can all affect the types of plant and animal communities present. Food webs are based both on free-floating algae and upon aquatic plants. There is usually a diverse array of aquatic life, with a few examples including algae, snails, fish, beetles, water bugs, frogs, turtles, otters, and muskrats. Top predators may include large fish, herons, or alligators. Since fish are a major predator upon amphibian larvae, ponds that dry up each year, thereby killing resident fish, provide important refugia for amphibian breeding. Ponds that dry up completely each year are often known as vernal pools. Some ponds are produced by animal activity, including alligator holes and beaver ponds, and these add important diversity to landscapes.

Ponds are frequently man made or expanded beyond their original depths and bounds by anthropogenic causes. Apart from their role as highly biodiverse, fundamentally natural, freshwater ecosystems ponds have had, and still have, many uses, including providing water for agriculture, livestock and communities, aiding in habitat restoration, serving as breeding grounds for local and migrating species, decorative components of landscape architecture, flood control basins, general urbanization, interception basins for pollutants and sources and sinks of greenhouse gases.

Purina may refer to:

  • Ralston Purina, an American pet food company that was acquired in 2001
  • Nestlé Purina PetCare, the pet food division of Swiss-based Nestlé S.A., and the acquirer of Ralston Purina Company in 2001 (subsequently merged with Nestlé's Friskies PetCare Company)
  • Purina Mills, a farm animal feed company that was spun off from Ralston Purina Company
Average Rating

5.00

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4 Reviews For This Product

  1. 04

    by Ronald

    The fish in our pond don’t like it as well as the Purina Sport fish food. We switched because the AquaMax 4000 was less expensive but a great deal of it goes to waste because the fish will not eat it.

  2. 04

    by Chris

    My koi and goldfish love this food… great price and quality!

  3. 04

    by Chris

    Catfish love it.

  4. 04

    by James

    Product arrived on time and in good condition.

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