Reef Central Online Community

Reef Central Online Community (http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/index.php)
-   Seahorses & Pipefish (http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=35)
-   -   Dwarf seahorse not eating (http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2496073)

wbarsuhn 04/12/2015 06:16 PM

Dwarf seahorse not eating
 
I bought some dwarf seahorses about 2 weeks ago. One of my males had babies on the first day I had him, and has been very healthy since then. The other day I had a bad hatch of baby brine shrimp and did not have much food for them that day. Since then, he has barely eaten or moved. His stomach is very thin now and he has no response to food. I am very worried and don't want to see him starve. The ammonia is at 0 and the nitrite and nitrate are at 5.0 and 0.25, and are going down. The salt level is normal. Please help!!!:worried:

cjm3 04/13/2015 01:32 PM

Can you give a quick rundown of your set-up (size, cycle time, filtration system, macro's and clean up animals, tankmates, etc)
And what are the readings for nitrites and nitrates?
How is everyone else in the tank eating?

DSH will continuously eat in the wild. A day without food can cause sever problems.
Is he flushing his pouch? Maybe he's just wanting to mate again.
Male Seahorses that have just had babies will look to mate very quickly after delivery.

Chuck

rayjay 04/13/2015 06:55 PM

Chuck, I've never had a problem with my dwarfs going a day without food when I went away for a couple of days.

cjm3 04/13/2015 08:52 PM

In a mature tank I've skipped one of the daily feedings without issue.
With them being in wbarsuhn's tank for only 2 weeks and 'trite & 'trate levels at the levels they're at I'm guessing it's a new tank still completing it's cycle.

I would recommend doing at least a 25% water change and keep an eye on all the DSH.
edit: If you don't notice this male eating soon, you might want to consider placing him in a hospital/holding tank with newly mixed water.

tjdouglas 04/20/2015 12:17 AM

Sorry to hear that your male dwarf is not eating. I know how stressful that can ber

You do want your nitrites to be at zero just like your ammonia. (Higher nitrates is OK). I believe cjm3 is right, that this tank is still going through the ammonia/nitrite/nitrate cycle. Maybe try adding one of the chlorine removers that also states that it temporarily lowers nitrites until you tank is fully cycled (can take up to six weeks). Do small water regularly changes as well until you find that both your Ammonia and Nitrites are running at zero.

Best wishes to you


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 01:23 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.