Dwarf gulf octo...

venom00viper

In Memoriam
Hey I was thinking about putting one in a nano. alone of course. Just want to know what I should look out for. also where to find them in S Florida. Any tank mates that are good. I look forward to your replies. Thanks!

-ben
 
Make sure it goes in no less than a 20 gallon. In Florida you are most likely to find O. Mercatoris or O. Joubini. Your best bet would be to go out at night with a flashlight. If you put a red filter on the light you are less likely to scare the octopus because red is hard for octopuses to see. I don't know of good collection sites however. Good luck on finding some.
 
ok so I have no idea where they even hide out. I live on the beach btu I have no idea about collecting. I do however get my clean up crew in the inlets. That is a thought though. I think they are pretty much in the gulf though. Thanks!

-ben
 
The best place to find small or dwarf sp is Phil Foster park off of
Blue Heron Blvd. Go under the fishing pier, all the way to the west of the parking lot and look for partially crushed aluminum cans. I find one in about every third can. They like ones that are partially crushed though, I guess less thing can get past the crease in the can. Pick up a bunch in a dive bag and bring them to shore. After you get the octos out throw the cans away, not back in the ocean, but open all cans first so you don't throw an octopus out by mistake. Take your pick, return the rest.
 
For what it's worth, O. mercatoris seems to be pretty tolerant of other merc's so you might be able to keep a small community of them.
 
I have read in the forums that octopuses seldom eat critters that are much smaller than them. With that in mind, would a dwarf/pygmy octopus feed better on mysid shrimp (up to a 1/4 inch long) or the common shore shrimp (palaemonetes vulgaris, about 1 inch long)? Also, does anyone have experience with them eating hermit crabs? I'm thinking that the fiddler crabs would be too large for the dwarf/pygmy octo. Thanks for any feedback!
 
I fed mine fiddlers quite regularly. Shrimp are hard to catch but yes they will eat them. Mysis and pods are probably going to be eaten in between meals or while scavenging when hungry whether you see it happen or not. I see my O. briareus feeling around in cracks and holes as well as completely engulfing rocks with its webbing, and I have seen a decline in the microfauna of my tank, which tells me that it is trapping and likely eating whatever critters it finds trapped underneath.

A member on TONMO has been supplementary feeding her dwarfs cyclopseeze and some of them have for lived over a year now.

While I wouldn't think that micro-foods are a staple diet by any means, octopuses absolutely do eat them.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11531726#post11531726 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by philter4
The best place to find small or dwarf sp is Phil Foster park off of
Blue Heron Blvd. Go under the fishing pier, all the way to the west of the parking lot and look for partially crushed aluminum cans. I find one in about every third can. They like ones that are partially crushed though, I guess less thing can get past the crease in the can. Pick up a bunch in a dive bag and bring them to shore. After you get the octos out throw the cans away, not back in the ocean, but open all cans first so you don't throw an octopus out by mistake. Take your pick, return the rest.

wow...im taking a vacation to florida this year..can u tell me exactly where that is?in south florida?
 
Yeah, it's south florida, the place he's talking about is about 20 minutes northeast of the Palm Beach International Airport
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12454735#post12454735 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by urbanthreatz
I'm going over there today, if i find any i'll post tonight once i get home.
oh i'll seriously pay u if u catch me one just name a price
 
Nope, water was kinda choppy and REALLY cloudy, so i'm going to go again on Sunday, i did see about 20 cushion starfish about the size of my head though! LOL
 
best time to dive there is 1/2 hour before high tide till about 20 minutes after high tide. After that the vis goes to crap.
 
just a heads up everyone... my lfs has 2 nice dwarf octos for sale, i think they're 49.00 each. let me know if you're interested!
 
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