Clean up crew in a seahorse only tank

I use cerith, redlegs, one emerald crab, rainfordi goby,nassarius, nerites,trochus, and believe it or not featherdusters. I have a 46 gallon bowfront tank that is my seahorse tank with hippocampus reidi in it this is by far the best clean up crew i have found went thru a long period fighting hair algea just stayed up with water changes and added a couple inverts in there and it finally cleared up after many months what got it finally and i know alot of yuou will disagree is i put in 5 feather dusters in my tank i know im probally the only person in history that think of them as a clean up crew but they filter the water when they feed and can pose no harm to the seahorses
 
yeah i know but i figured to put my 2 cents in on it if anyone else came across it lol

Keep a good eye on the Mithrax (emerald crab)...they can get flaky when they get some size on them, esp in a SH tank at night. IME, crabs do not belong in a SH setup as I've even seen scarlets grab onto resting SH's tails.

JME/JMHO
 
I would stick largely with snails. Stromatella that reproduce in your tank are ideal.
Hermits should only be tiny species, if any - though they are more a threat to snails than seahorses.
If the tank is larger and you don't have macro algae you may also try urchins for algae control.

As leftover food consumers you could try one of the smaller Stenopus shrimp species - I would recommend S. tenuirostris or S. cyanoscelis, both smaller and peaceful species. They will usually only come out at night or collect food that gets close enough to their cave. I have several pairs of both species with my pipefish and no issues.

BTW: I can only confirm that Banggai Cardinals are very aggressive eaters and also not necessarily peaceful. My 3 Banggai pairs are crazy wild eaters and so fast that my other fish have a hard time competing.
I need to fill them up first before the other fish cam get food.
I could also imagine that Banggais don't like seahorses much as they are a possible thread to their fry.

Better tank mates may be pipefish or mandarins.
 
Bringing it back one more time. Does anyone have any opinion relative to shrimp like skunk cleaners or peppermint? I have a 34 gallon tank I am making into a sea horse tank, was thinking one skunk or a couple peppermints (they do better in groups IME). I know they would compete for food, but how much can one or two shrimp eat?
 
Peppermint shrimp are fine in a seahorse tank. They help clean up uneaten food and don't bother seahorses.


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Bringing it back one more time. Does anyone have any opinion relative to shrimp like skunk cleaners or peppermint? I have a 34 gallon tank I am making into a sea horse tank, was thinking one skunk or a couple peppermints (they do better in groups IME). I know they would compete for food, but how much can one or two shrimp eat?

I have a couple peppermint shrimp in my tank. They can get very brazen if you are feeding from a dish on the floor. Now my dish is up high on the side of the tank. Also small peppermint shrimp can end up being dinner, so choose speciments on the larger size and introduce them either before the seahorses or after the lights are out so they can find hiding places.
 
My peppermint shrimp stay in their cave the vast majority of the time. They are only willing to come out briefly to nab a piece of mysis if it drifts by their cave. Otherwise, I think they are afraid of the seahorses despite being large in size.
 
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