My seahorse twitches uncontrollably, help

sea_horses

New member
Hi there:

My female seahorse twitches or like she's having seizers :worried:

She eats as normal but every now and the she does that (the twich).

Anyone here is or has experience/ed this?????

Please, I need to know what could be causing this..:confused:

Cheers.
 
What size tank is she in? What are your test results showing? Please post the test results. What type of seahorse is she? Captive bred or tank raised?

Twitching could be from a parasite load or from ammonia.

Kind Regards,

Tim
 
Tim, thank you for your response.
The tank is 86 litres. The test are normal. I have been checking the water twice a day. I have done a water change.
pH between 7.8/8.0
Ammonia 0ppm
Nitrite 0ppm
Nitrate 0ppm
salt 1.025
temp 26 degrees C

They are (I have 4 in total) common seahorses. They are captive bred. They eat frozen food.

Cheers.
 
Tim, thank you for your response.
The tank is 86 litres. The test are normal. I have been checking the water twice a day. I have done a water change.
pH between 7.8/8.0
Ammonia 0ppm
Nitrite 0ppm
Nitrate 0ppm
salt 1.025
temp 26 degrees C

They are (I have 4 in total) common seahorses. They are captive bred. They eat frozen food.

Cheers.

What country are you located in?

Do you mean H. kuda when you are refering to them as common seahorses? How long have you had them for? Also your tank is too small for even one pair, let alone two pairs. Minimum is 120liters for the first pair and 55liters for each pair after that. The twitching could be from her carrying a parasite load? Also if it is at all possible, please lower the temp to around 23C. 26C is too high and will lead to problems due to bacteria reproducing quickly at the higher temp. The PH could be a little higher also, you want it around 8.2.

Kind Regards,

Tim
 
Yes Tim, they are Hippocampus kuda.
I will consider the size of the tank, thanks for that tip.

Regarding the other things that you've mentioned. Done. Temp lowered to 23/24.
Oh, I am in Australia.

I will keep it post it. Thank you very much.

Laura
 
Yes Tim, they are Hippocampus kuda.
I will consider the size of the tank, thanks for that tip.

Regarding the other things that you've mentioned. Done. Temp lowered to 23/24.
Oh, I am in Australia.

I will keep it post it. Thank you very much.

Laura

Hi Laura,

If possible, please move them to a larger tank. I think in the next few months you will be running into more problems with them. A tank that size will not be able to handle the bio load produce by 4 seahorses for very long and problems like Gas bubble disease, bacteria infection and illness will take hold.

Also in all likelyhood, they are tank raised kuda being called captive bred. What size are they and how much did you pay for them?

Kind Regards,

Tim
 
I bought 2 kuda females after 3-4 months I vaccummed my sandbed and must have kicked up something (ammonia?) and my smaller one started to get jerky and then she died about a week later after getting progressevly worse.:( My other girl was a little bigger and suffered no ill effects and is going strong a year later.I replaced her with an almost identical female (don't want fry yet) and I don't "deep" clean my sandbed (I also added a watchmen gobbie who slowly turns some of my sand seems to help keep sand a bit cleaner).I guess the point of all this would be did you do anything different from normal(stir sand,top off the tank,...ect)?
 
hi amazo, the only thing that I did different was to introduce live food for a new fish (Mandarin dragonet)... obviously the girls (seahorses) LOVE the live food but it seems like this episode started the twitches in one of them.
I am sorry to hear about your seahorse :(
 
It's parasites, do you have Formalin 37% if not get some and treat asap. I only say this because your parameters are perfect.
 
hi amazo, the only thing that I did different was to introduce live food for a new fish (Mandarin dragonet)... obviously the girls (seahorses) LOVE the live food but it seems like this episode started the twitches in one of them.
I am sorry to hear about your seahorse :(

Hi Laura,

You are really asking for problems with your stocking level. Beside the seahorses and the mandarin, what else do you have in the tank?

Kind Regards,

Tim
 
WallysWorld:
I am not sure about Formolin bcoz as far as I know is use to treat external protozoans and flukes.
If there are parasites, should not I be giving her flagyl, Niclosamide or Praziquantel ?
cheers
 
I bought 2 kuda females after 3-4 months I vaccummed my sandbed and must have kicked up something (ammonia?) and my smaller one started to get jerky and then she died about a week later after getting progressevly worse.:( My other girl was a little bigger and suffered no ill effects and is going strong a year later.I replaced her with an almost identical female (don't want fry yet) and I don't "deep" clean my sandbed (I also added a watchmen gobbie who slowly turns some of my sand seems to help keep sand a bit cleaner).I guess the point of all this would be did you do anything different from normal(stir sand,top off the tank,...ect)?

Try some nassaria (spelling?) snails. They turn the sand over better with no ill effects. I actually have my Mustangs in the deep sand bed tank with bunch of macroalgae.
 
You can also do a fresh water dip for parasites. Match the temp and ph and dunk the sick one for up to 12 minutes. It will likely twich and spasm like crazy after a few minutes, that's a good sign; it means the parasites are dying, sometimes you can literally see them free floating in the fresh water during the dip as they flee the host.
 
WallysWorld:
I am not sure about Formolin bcoz as far as I know is use to treat external protozoans and flukes.
If there are parasites, should not I be giving her flagyl, Niclosamide or Praziquantel ?
cheers

No, use Formalin 37% it works where others fail! This is from experience...
 
Back
Top