Ocean Rider Seahorse Farm and Tours | Kona Hawaii › Forums › Seahorse Life and Care › pregnant male update /female not eating
- This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 9 months ago by Pete Giwojna.
-
AuthorPosts
-
September 1, 2014 at 6:20 am #2060Ko – Wa – Ci- 67Member
Well, my male must not have been pregnant from last crtg dance. A new courtship began 2 days ago (2wks since last) . The female seemed more receptive this time. But now she is not eating nor leaving her favorate perch. I read in your “book ” to try live food to entice, so will get some tomorrow. But is it common for them to go off their feed after a poss mating? Could it be due to excaution? The male has eaten.
September 1, 2014 at 7:12 pm #5730Pete GiwojnaGuestDear 67:
No, sir, seahorses that are actively courting and breeding normally have a very good appetite. They tend to eat heartily because they need all the calories they can get at this time. It takes a lot of a females bodily resources to produce a clutch of eggs and ripen them for mating, so a nutritious diet rich in calories is required by breeding females.
Likewise, it is very energetically demanding for a male to be carrying a brood of developing young, and a gravid male needs all of carries he can get to support the fetal fry and embryonic young growing in his marsupium. So breeding pairs typically eat very well, 67, and it sounds like something is amiss if your female has lost her appetite and become lethargic.
It’s a good idea for you to tempt her to eat with some choice live foods, which will also provide your ponies with some useful behavioral enrichment since they get the thrill of the chase while stalking and hunting real live “catch-me-if-you-can” live prey. Hopefully that will perk her up again.
But I would also recommend that you increase the aeration and surface agitation in your aquarium to increase the levels of dissolved oxygen in the water, and that you perform a water change, or series of partial water changes, as soon as possible in order to improve your water quality and replenish trace elements in the tank.
Good luck, 67! Here’s hoping your female soon snaps out of it and begins eating like a horse again.
Respectfully,
Pete Giwojna, Ocean Rider Tech Support -
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.