Thinking about converting to seahorses...

Ali88

New member
I was thinking about turning my tank into a seahorse tank. I have a 46 gallon tank with about 35 pounds of live rock. For filtration, I have a Fluval 404. Living in my tank is a firefish, a feather duster, some xenia coral, two short-spined urchins, and some hermit crabs. The tank has been set up for several years, and the water quality is excellent. I plan on getting a bunch of macro-algae for the seahorses to hitch on to. I want to start with a pair of h. erectus. Any comments/suggestions/problems with this plan?
 
Before adding the seahorses, I would get rid of the urchins and the hermit crabs. They both present a danger to the horses. Seahorses are slow moving and like to hitch to things, so anything that can poke them or sting them when they hitch to it is not a good idea. Hermit crabs can injure a seahorse's tail and complications can cause death. There are a few species people have had luck with. I would check the "tankmates" forum on www.seahorse.org to see whether you think you will be able to keep a couple of them. I'd also take a look at your flow rate. Seahorses like low flow (a turnover rate of about 3-5x). Most reef tanks have too high flow. There are various mods you can do to make the flow work for your horses.
 
Thanks for the advice. The urchins have very dull spines, I'm not sure of the exact species, but do you think they would still be hazardous even though they're so dull? Any other advice? Thanks!
 
I think that if you hypothetically stuck your pinky all in between the spines and maybe tried to wrap it around a couple, and you wouldn't get poked at all, not even a dent in your finger, then you are definately okay. But, if your skin would get punctured and you'd end up with a little hole in your pinky then that might not be so good, since a little hole in a seahorse tail can cause big problems, especially since their tails get less blood flow than the rest of the body.
 
Back
Top