Seahorses with Reef

kaserpick

Keeping it Simple
Hey, I'm knew to seahorses and I would like to make a reef tank but only with seahorses.

1.Can you mix a reef with seahorses sense they grab on to things?

2.Are there any corals that can be kept with seahorses? If so, then what kinds are seahorse friendly??

Thanks for the imput! :)
 
Yes you can put a seahorse in a reef type environment, but...

There are three issues:

1. Temperature. Horses do not seem to do well for many people at reef tank temperatures. You neet to run your tank cooler than a normal reef tank.

2. Horses can handle more water flow than some people think, but not the really high velocities found in some reef tanks. If you want to keep reef type corals, you need to make sure they get sufficient flow while providing some more quiet areas for your horses. If you do this, you will find that the horses will move in and out of different flow areas.

3. Some corals pack quite a sting and can be a risk to horses. Also some corals such as elegance and Tracophyla (sp??) may eat your horses. Most soft corals, discosoma shrooms, ricordia floridia, zenia, zoanthids, gorgonians and a number of other corals are just fine with horses.

FYI the seahorses we keep come from seagrass/algae bed habitats and there are corals such as gorgonians, ricurdia floridia and some stony corals that come from these areas. I think that horses prefer seagrass or algae as a hitching point and will be more comfortable if you provide them some.

Hope this helps.

Fred
 
I second what Fred said. I have a reef tank with horses. I have provided macroalgae as well.

I have some Kenya Tree Coral, Ricordia, gorgorians, and various polyps of sorts. They add a lot of color to the tank...
 
Red and orange tree sponges make great hitching posts and can bring out brighter colors in your horses.
 
I thought sponges were difficult to care for though. Do they require any special type of food? Thanks Whylde!
 
Sponges typically feed on very small particles, virus to bacteria sized. There are some photosynthetic sponges, but it is hit and miss as sponge identification requires spicules (sp?) and a microscope.

Fred
 
Sponges are diffucult. Most do not have long term succsess with the tree sponges. Personally I have done well with a pinaplle sponge and a blue ball sponge. Sorry no specific secies ID.
 
From everything I have read, phytoplankton is way to big a food for sponges.

I wonder if the ones you have are photosynthetic.

Fred
 
I've had it a few months, it had some dead spots on it when I got it, but they are gone. I also have two orange ones, about four months, they have had noticeable growth, about 1/4 inch in that time. You're welcome Kasey :)
 

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