Zach Vs Ponies
New member
I have a 55 gallon seahorse tank with live rock. Whenever I picked out the rock for this tank, I never checked for tiny holes in rocks, because I've never heard of them being a problem.
Anyways, I've recently figured out they are. This morning I woke up to find one of my female seahorses with her tail stuck in a small hole in a piece of live rock. At the time, I had no idea how to react. I only found one other person online who had a problem with their seahorses tail being stuck in the water, and they didn't list on how to get it out. So, acting in panic, I picked up the rock (It was a very small rock) and tried to break it (Keeping it in the water, of course). This didn't work so I felt my only choice was to pull her out of the rock. With two fingers, VERY gently, I put them around her tail, and VERY gently pulled a little bit. I continued, VERY GENTLY and VERY SLOWLY, and eventually pulled her out far enough so that she could swim away herself.
Now, that she's out, she's basically bobbing vertically at the surface. Her tail isn't wrapped in the normal coil formation that a seahorse is normally in, but it's wrapped in a big circle. It also looks as if part of her skin has come off on one side of the tail. I haven't really seen her move her tail since she's come out, and am concerned that her tail is completely paralyzed.
Does anyone have any ideas on how I can help her?
PS: Pictures in the next post..
Anyways, I've recently figured out they are. This morning I woke up to find one of my female seahorses with her tail stuck in a small hole in a piece of live rock. At the time, I had no idea how to react. I only found one other person online who had a problem with their seahorses tail being stuck in the water, and they didn't list on how to get it out. So, acting in panic, I picked up the rock (It was a very small rock) and tried to break it (Keeping it in the water, of course). This didn't work so I felt my only choice was to pull her out of the rock. With two fingers, VERY gently, I put them around her tail, and VERY gently pulled a little bit. I continued, VERY GENTLY and VERY SLOWLY, and eventually pulled her out far enough so that she could swim away herself.
Now, that she's out, she's basically bobbing vertically at the surface. Her tail isn't wrapped in the normal coil formation that a seahorse is normally in, but it's wrapped in a big circle. It also looks as if part of her skin has come off on one side of the tail. I haven't really seen her move her tail since she's come out, and am concerned that her tail is completely paralyzed.
Does anyone have any ideas on how I can help her?
PS: Pictures in the next post..
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