Dolabella Sea Hare acclimation

mr.clownfish

Active Member
how should i acclimate it? should i just float it in the bag and add him directly to the aquarium or should i drip acclimate him?
and how long should i float it? can i have a quick answer please... thanks
 

mr.clownfish

Active Member
well its too late.
i didnt drip acclimate him. just added a few cups of my water into his bag and let it settle for 2 mins and i added him to my tank.
 

maxsmart

Member
Did he survive? I gave my first Sea Hare a 3.5 hour drip, but he only survived a week. I got a second one, I'm drip-acclimating right now. I'm hoping they're just hit or miss, or that I killed him by moving a rock over where he was buried, because I can't figure out why else he would have died, unless they require a whole lot more acclimation or something. He sure was gobbling up the algae while he lasted!
I have this odd trend in my tank - anything labelled "easy" dies within a month, whereas anything marked "difficult" thrives.
 

mr.clownfish

Active Member
he survived for like 9 days then i found it in the back of my tank behind all my live rock. there was no way i could get it out. but i didnt get any nitrate or ammonia jumps. i was surprised.
 

mr.clownfish

Active Member
Originally Posted by MaxSmart
http:///forum/post/3057024
Did he survive? I gave my first Sea Hare a 3.5 hour drip, but he only survived a week. I got a second one, I'm drip-acclimating right now. I'm hoping they're just hit or miss, or that I killed him by moving a rock over where he was buried, because I can't figure out why else he would have died, unless they require a whole lot more acclimation or something. He sure was gobbling up the algae while he lasted!
I have this odd trend in my tank - anything labelled "easy" dies within a month, whereas anything marked "difficult" thrives.
OMG! i have the same problem!!! b4 about 2 months ago for 3 years i have been tring to keep a simple easy to care for anemone alive but i was not successful untill like a month ago. my seahare dies, my starfish always died in like 1 week. a few of my yellow citron gobies died, they died because they did not eat food. they where retards.
and yet i have been able to keep alive flame scallops, nudibraches, flower pot coral alive for a long time!!
 

nycbob

Active Member
i dripped acclimated my 2 dolabella hares for 1 hour when i got mine months ago. they r happy in my 2 tanks. sorry it died for u clown. where did u get it from? lfs? i got mine at swf.com. they r very hardy at least with what i hv experienced. great sandsifters also. comes out only at night. r u sure urs is dead behind the rocks?
 

mr.clownfish

Active Member
this is really going to sound very stupid,after all this time in the hobby, what is acclimation? the only acclimation i know is drip acclimation.
 

maxsmart

Member
Originally Posted by Mr.clownfish
http:///forum/post/3057639
this is really going to sound very stupid,after all this time in the hobby, what is acclimation? the only acclimation i know is drip acclimation.
Acclimation means the process of letting the critter adjust to the new pH, temp, salinity, etc of their new home. There's drip-acclimation (which you're familiar with), temperature acclimation (float the bag in the tank for a half hour), diffusion acclimation (pole tiny holes in the bag and allow water to gradually flow between the bag and the tank), and I'm sure there's more. Acclimation also might include turning lights off the first day to calm the fish and prevent bullying, or other things. In short, helping the newcomer adjust to the new environment.
 

woody189

Member
I didn't read all your posts, but the reason they keep dieing probably isn't because of acclimation.
They need algae to live, and when you 1st add them, they may have enough to eat, but once they eat it all they die.
You have to have a huge tank or supplement w/ algae sheets.
I never had one, but I think that's how it is. I don't think acclimation was the problem.
 
Man, i have had one in my tank for about a week now. At first, I would see him even when the lights were on. Now I have not seen him for 2-3 days. Should I be concerned , or do they just disappear into the rocks?
I have looked everywhere in the rockwork as well as I can. Do they bury themselves or anything like that? When should I get concerned about not seeing it?
I'll look again tonight after work and see if I can spot it. It was doind a great job at the beginning on the hair algae on the sandbed!
 

woody189

Member
Originally Posted by Golgi Aparatus
http:///forum/post/3059383
Man, i have had one in my tank for about a week now. At first, I would see him even when the lights were on. Now I have not seen him for 2-3 days. Should I be concerned , or do they just disappear into the rocks?
I have looked everywhere in the rockwork as well as I can. Do they bury themselves or anything like that? When should I get concerned about not seeing it?
I'll look again tonight after work and see if I can spot it. It was doind a great job at the beginning on the hair algae on the sandbed!
is there more algae for it to eat? if not, it'll probably die. get algae sheets. idk about hiding and stuff
 

maxsmart

Member
My new hare dissapeared two days after I got him. I'll wait a few days to declare him dead, but this is bothering me. I have LOTS of algae, hair and macro, growing in my tank. I have a few theories, let me know what you think:
1) I have a poisonous algae. I have some hair that is brownish-red, I'd read somewhere that some are poisonous? I noticed his poops the second day were bright orange.
2) The flatworms (the velvet nudi's almost elminated them) are getting eaten and poisoning him. This falls in with my bright-orange poop observation.
3) He's coming in contact with the velvet nudi's "slime", (every time he gets caught in a high-flow area he releases some) and it is poisonous.
4) He's sufficating. I think I've got pretty good aeration, and with all that macro algae you'd think oxygen is plentiful. But since the hair algae frequently clogs the overflow slits, the tank occasionally gets filled to where the water it touching the glass, so there's no gas transfer going on at the top of the tank (I still have an open sump with protein skimmer) until I brush out the slits.
5) I have a critter in the live rock that's killing and eating them. I did see a small fish that died in my tank getting lifted up to a hole behind the live rock - though the fish was pretty small, it seemed too big for an amphipod to carry and maneuver like the fish corpse was doing.
6) My tank parameters aren't right for him. The water is generally around 81-82 degrees, 1.025 for sg. There are 0-readings for trites, trates, and ammonia, before someone asks.
7) One or both of these things are actually still alive, but hiding REALLY well, to where my repeated attempts to locate them, day and night (with flashlight) are fruitless. This would also involve them not eating very much, since the hair algae is not going away.
 

maxsmart

Member

He came out yesterday after work! I've got at least one of them alive. I believe this was the second one, he was more grey than black like the first one. Now I'm wondering if I actually have two of them in there...
 
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