What types of Cuttlefish can be kept in warmer temps??

Mr James

Premium Member
I did a search, not a very lengthy one, on Cuttlefish. I think my 29 gallon (sitting empty at the moment) would be of the correct size. What I was wondering about is the temperatures at which to keep one or more Cuttlefish. I want to avoid a chiller at all possible. Could you also tell me what other species I can keep with them?? I will continue to search and read before I purchase anything!! Good idea about the research, huh Kirtis??
 
Hi James,

Well getting a cuttle in the first place is the real trick..... They can be real tricky to ship....

A 29 gallon may be too small for a cuttle unless you get a small species like Sepia bandensis and have excellant filtration, they are really messy critters.

I currently have Sepia officinalis in a 200 gallon system at 74 DEG F and he is fine.... there are some pics on this site and here http://saltaquarium.about.com/library/blank/blpcontestjune02critter.htm and on TONMO.com or alternatively at my web page, click the link next to my name and profile....

I currently have him in a reef tank with snails, hermits, stars, corals, anemones, sea apple and some other stuff too....

Colin
 
So your cuttlefish must be a swimmer!! I guess I could still get one but put him in my 125g reef tank. I would have to do a lot of reading to make sure he is compatible with all of my existing creatures. My alternative for my 29g would be an SPS (Coral) tank if this doesn't work.

I wanted a unique species tank other than a seahorse tank. I saw that one of the guys on this board keeps an octo in a 30 gallon. Assuming the tank could be set up correctly, could some species of an octopus be kept in such a tank?? Thank you for responding OctoMonkey, I kind of hoped you would chime in!!
 
Hey, no prob :)

An octo would be far easier to get and would be more comfortable in a 30 gal tank. It just depends on the species you get and how you set up your tank.... As you may be planning a SPS tank I'll asume you know all the stuff I'm talking about.... but be aware that they produce more than 3 times the waste that a fish of the similar mass produces so filters and skimmers are usually best if over spec for a typical 30 gal tank.

I have found that as long as its not a fish, a shrimp or a crab the cuttle wont bother it, fast movements set off a feeding reaction, cool to watch but may be expensive when you stick one in beside your favourite fish LOL

hope that helps
C
 
Hey Colin, what types of octopi should I be investigating for my 29g?? I originally looked into it, but I must have asked the wrong person, because I was told that octo's need at least a 75 gallon. Would tonmo.com be a good place to look or is that site about Cuttlefish and such??
 
Colin is right James
Cuttles are very hard to get in the US. The only species availabe though wholesalers is Sepia.bandensis, a pygmy cuttle and they don't ship well at all. And to top it off they are very hard to get. Both Mike and I have had bad luck with getting and keeping them. Cuttles should not be your first ceph. I would strat with a O.bimaculoides for your first octopus. After your tank has cycled for 3 months tthat would be the octo of choice to get for any ceph keeper.And they are easy to get.
chris
 
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