Algae on seahorses?

djc1026

New member
Is it fairly common for algae to grow on seahorses? If so should one worry about the growth and if you do, is there a removal method?

Dave
 
Thanks for the reply, I'm waiting for the LFS to get a batch of smaller cleaners, my horses are juveniles and the large ones that are available I think would be too aggressive. I suppose I could try peppermints, but my experience with them is that they are pretty inactive.
 
I use a turkey baster, and blow the algae off---in real extreme cases I use a soft toothbrush--some of my seahorses are ok with it, but others hate it!!!! I have 2 horses that hitch in front of the powerhead and let it blow the algae off of them. The first site of this scared me to death, but I have learned to cope with it!!! They look so funny hanging on getting blown all around, but they really seem to like it.
 
My cleaner shrimp tried to clean my horses, but they did NOT like it. I replaced it with peppermint shrimp, which the horses quickly ganged up on and ate. (expensive snack)

I do as jcatblum does-turkey baster or toothbrush if absolutely necessary.
 
I have kept peppermints for years with no problems of horses eating them. Maybe they were just small peppermints? My horses do eat the shrimp fry.

The algae is only a nuissance to you. In the wild many seahorses ahve algae growing on them. It aids them with there camo.

I have never had to remove any from my horses. They grow a bit now and then but nothing severe.
 
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