All about the ancient tribes
Feeding Seahorses in Captivity
Some of the frozen food which they enjoy includes planktons, krill, and grass shrimps.
They anchor themselves with their prehensile tails to sea grasses and corals, using their elongated snouts to suck in plankton and small crustaceans that drift by. The seahorse can suck up food from as far as 3cm away. The seahorse feeds constantly on plankton and tiny fish.
Seahorses’ bodies are covered in tiny, spiny plates, all the way from their head down to their curled, flexible tail. The tail can grasp objects, which comes in handy when these cool critters want to anchor themselves to vegetation. To move forward through the water, seahorses use their dorsal fin (back fin).
about one to five years
brine shrimp nauplii
Most seahorses should be fed six to eight shrimp twice a day. Larger horses will eat more, so observing your animals is important.
Even though some species have some of the world’s most toxic venoms, they are not aggressive and rarely present a threat to humans or cause human injuries or fatalities. Generally they do not bite unless they are handled. Often don’t even release venom when they bite.
With their slow, gentle demeanors and curlicue tails, seahorses might seem like the most harmless, unassuming creatures under the sea. But they’re actually one of the most deadly.
In fact, some species of seahorse can give birth to more than 1,000 babies at once! After he has given birth, the seahorse dad does nothing more for his babies. They must look after themselves and hide from predators, as they have no parents to protect them. … That’s right, males sometimes eat their own babies.
seamare
Seahorses follow a strict diet, and the goal is to eat—constantly. Since they don’t have teeth or even a stomach at all like other marine species do, the structure of a seahorse digestive system is also markedly unique.
The hippocampus, named after the Greek for seahorse, is what makes our memory work. … The brain is a remarkably complex jungle of neurons.
Though unique in their care needs, seahorses are surprisingly easy to keep (and even breed) if they are maintained in the proper type of fish aquarium system, kept with appropriate tankmates, and offered the right kinds of fish food. Most of all, they can be extremely rewarding to observe and care for.
A female has an ovipositor for depositing her eggs in a male’s brood pouch. It’s normal for a female to deposit her eggs in a male when she becomes mature; no sex change is involved. Females may compete for males, which some observers consider a sex-role reversal.