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#1
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![]() http://youtube.com/watch?v=Y2x2dIlfLU4
never realized they swim so much and last out until minute 3:20, guy had some good timing. |
#2
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![]() Cool video
![]() Great footage of the male giving birth. All the times my males gave birth, it was before lights on. I kept him in a birthing chamber at the top of the tank the night before he was going to give birth, so the fry wouldn't get lost in the tank. |
#3
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![]() Cool vid! Although I would like to comment on it a bit...
first off, If you keep seahorses please keep them with non aggressive tankmates (unlike damsels)... generally it isn't a good mix. I guess the videographer had it going well but it will usually just stress out the horses. second, I believe that artemia are a bit bit too big for baby seahorses... I would prefer starting with rotifers which are about six times smaller. third, I agree with the guy that the only seahorses you should buy are captive bred. Wild seahorses hate dead food. Too many people buy wild/untrained seahorses unknowingly and when they die of starvation the people wonder why. |
#4
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![]() Quote:
I also got a few H. reidi (I think) fry from BA's when I was raising my H. whitei. Amazing how tiny the reidi fry were compared to the H. whitei fry. All I had on hand to feed the reidi fry were artemia which were much too big for the fry. Unfortunately, they did not survive past three days ![]() |
#5
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![]() What kind of gorgonia does he have and are they hard to keep?
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#6
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![]() ahhhh makes sense bev. I really only have experience with H. reidi and H. abdominalis.
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