is this a bad idea...

genix

Premium Member
I'm considering putting a seahorse or two into my refugium. It's about 12x6x10". Is that too small? also, I've read that you should run UV sterilizers to keep seahorses. But for the health of my reef, I can't. Is that okay? Are pipefish subject to the same infections that warrant UV on seahorse tanks?
 
thanks for the replies, but I'm a newb to seahorses. could you give me some info...like what is an appropriate tank size and temp for seahorses or pipefish?
 
29 or bigger really. They need height since they are vertical fish. Temps should not exceed 74, at 74 the bacteria mutate and multiply very quickly which can increase the seahorses risk of becoming infected with diseases such as vibrio. They need low to moderate flow because they are weak swimmers and plenty of places to hitch onto, they hitch i would say like 85% of the time and swim the other 15% of the time.

This is all for seahorses. I think it depends with pipefish, some hitch some don't, some are more vertical swimmers some are more horizontal.
 
Seahorses really produce a lot of waste, and you'd be doing your reef a disservice to add them to your refugium anyway. If you are using your refugium for nitrate export, the last thing you want to do is add a nitrate factory to it, and thats what seahorses are. They need to eat multiple times a day, they are carnivores, and they have simple digestive systems where everything goes in one end and right back out the other. They could easily produce more waste than your refugium could take care of.
The 10" height just won't work for seahorses. I'd recommend an 18" height minimum. Seahorses are "tall" fish, and to some extent won't even fit in short tanks, since they reach anywhere from 6"-12" tall from head to tail (and if you figure in sandbed and airspace, the height gets even smaller in a tank). Factor in the fact that they are vertical swimmers, and 24" water depth is more ideal.
Like Fishymann said, 29 gallons is a good starting size for a pair of most seahorses, and 74 degrees is the max you want to go without a large water volume and/or UV sterilizer considering how difficult it is to treat a sick seahorse.
You'll probably be better off looking at pipefish, but I don't know as much about them. You would still need a larger refugium. You would also have to suppliment their feedings, as they probably won't subsist on the pods in a small fuge alone. Pipefish are almost all wild caught in the U.S. and can be difficult to convert to frozen foods, so you would have to consider that. Reef type pipefish, I believe, can handle more flow and higher temps, however I think they would also be more comfortable in a reef setting rather than a fuge full of macros... someone else could tell you for sure on that though.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10112412#post10112412 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by genix
thanks for the replies, but I'm a newb to seahorses. could you give me some info...like what is an appropriate tank size and temp for seahorses or pipefish?

Hi,
There are differant species of seahorses. The keeping requirements, such as tank size and temp can vary greatly depending on the specific species.

You will have a better chance of being successful with them if you do some serious research and set up the appropriate tank directed toward a specific species . As with anything else, one size does not fit all.
 
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