rykna
Active Member
Originally Posted by 1journeyman
http:///forum/post/2455871
Totally agree with that. That's why I mentioned where I was diving. I can only speak to the species found off the Mexican coast in the Carribean.
Thought on Location of seahorses~ if (and that can be a big if sometimes) we are purchasing Captive Bred Seahorses, how does any of the conditions of the wild habitat impact our captive bred seahorses?
As we all know, certain species of fish are more susceptible to stress and illness. That is why we have divided fish keeping into categories. I guess what I thinking is, going back to basics. Using me as an example, I have kept fish long enough to become comfortable with my knowledge. Or perhaps I should say careless with my knowledge. I take short cuts that I would instruct beginners NOT to use.
So I started reveiwing~
FISH101
What type of fish are we housing?
Community
Aggressive
Timid
Are we providing proper hiding areas, etc. When building a community fresh water tank, I always divided the tank into levels; bottom fish, mid level fish, top level fish. I also divided the tank up with structural components to provide hiding places, and help define territories.
Water quality
Food/Nutrition
Providing a proper environment
Even gold fish cannot survive with out these essentials. Ophiura mentioned that reporting all tank levels is necessary to finding the cause of a problem. Many of us, myself included, have only posted the most critical levels when problems arose. In doing so, we may very well have over looked/missed what has been causing our losses.
I also agree the algae, like maiden hair, is a reg flag. Unwanted algae growth appears when your water quality changes.
~ I was thinking about 1journeyman's response to the slight PH change in my tank. How could a slight change in PH cause my pony tank to crash within 3 hours? Well, I reversed the playing field. I put myself in the seahorses' situation.
Example: Carbon monoxide is a silent killer in our homes. It only takes a few hours to claim an entire house hold. A tank is over 100 times smaller than our homes...so that means that 8.3 VS 7.9 is just as deadly to our fish.
http:///forum/post/2455871
Totally agree with that. That's why I mentioned where I was diving. I can only speak to the species found off the Mexican coast in the Carribean.
Thought on Location of seahorses~ if (and that can be a big if sometimes) we are purchasing Captive Bred Seahorses, how does any of the conditions of the wild habitat impact our captive bred seahorses?
As we all know, certain species of fish are more susceptible to stress and illness. That is why we have divided fish keeping into categories. I guess what I thinking is, going back to basics. Using me as an example, I have kept fish long enough to become comfortable with my knowledge. Or perhaps I should say careless with my knowledge. I take short cuts that I would instruct beginners NOT to use.
So I started reveiwing~
FISH101
What type of fish are we housing?
Community
Aggressive
Timid
Are we providing proper hiding areas, etc. When building a community fresh water tank, I always divided the tank into levels; bottom fish, mid level fish, top level fish. I also divided the tank up with structural components to provide hiding places, and help define territories.
Water quality
Food/Nutrition
Providing a proper environment
Even gold fish cannot survive with out these essentials. Ophiura mentioned that reporting all tank levels is necessary to finding the cause of a problem. Many of us, myself included, have only posted the most critical levels when problems arose. In doing so, we may very well have over looked/missed what has been causing our losses.
I also agree the algae, like maiden hair, is a reg flag. Unwanted algae growth appears when your water quality changes.
~ I was thinking about 1journeyman's response to the slight PH change in my tank. How could a slight change in PH cause my pony tank to crash within 3 hours? Well, I reversed the playing field. I put myself in the seahorses' situation.
Example: Carbon monoxide is a silent killer in our homes. It only takes a few hours to claim an entire house hold. A tank is over 100 times smaller than our homes...so that means that 8.3 VS 7.9 is just as deadly to our fish.