- Joined
- Jan 20, 2020
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- California
Wanted to run this observation by folks here, to see if this is a known thing:
6wks ago I realized my dwarf seahorses were being poisoned by nitrates. They had been breeding so freely and I had been cautioned against doing big changes, lest someone spill his eggs, so I got a bit lax on the water change routine. When I realized what was going on, I transferred everyone out to a hospital tank with good water quality. The symptoms of the nitrate poisoning (twitching, itching, seizure like movement) ceased upon transfer.
In the past several weeks, I have had 4 males give birth. All conceived while in the new clean water, in the entirely separate tank. Only one male had a normal batch of fry--a small batch of 3. The others have all carried to term, 14 days on the dot, but the babies have come out half baked. The majority still have significant yolk sacs and can't swim yet. They end up in piles on the tank floor and I have to scoop them up and put them in a nursery.
Thankfully, some of these half bakes make it. If they can absorb the yolk and start swimming over the next 2 days, I know they are fine and can be turned loose. The survivors are not the majority though. Had another batch born today: 2 still born, 3 fully formed and good to go, and 3 who needed the nursery.
Is this recent batch of birth defects a lasting result of the nitrate poisoning the fathers (or mothers) suffered? Will it ever go away? I have a robust population but I'm wondering if I'll need to buy some new stock that wasn't subjected to the nitrates, to keep my numbers going.
Nutrition is very good, so I don't think that's the problem. They get enriched bbs and copepods (tig and tisbe) daily.
6wks ago I realized my dwarf seahorses were being poisoned by nitrates. They had been breeding so freely and I had been cautioned against doing big changes, lest someone spill his eggs, so I got a bit lax on the water change routine. When I realized what was going on, I transferred everyone out to a hospital tank with good water quality. The symptoms of the nitrate poisoning (twitching, itching, seizure like movement) ceased upon transfer.
In the past several weeks, I have had 4 males give birth. All conceived while in the new clean water, in the entirely separate tank. Only one male had a normal batch of fry--a small batch of 3. The others have all carried to term, 14 days on the dot, but the babies have come out half baked. The majority still have significant yolk sacs and can't swim yet. They end up in piles on the tank floor and I have to scoop them up and put them in a nursery.
Thankfully, some of these half bakes make it. If they can absorb the yolk and start swimming over the next 2 days, I know they are fine and can be turned loose. The survivors are not the majority though. Had another batch born today: 2 still born, 3 fully formed and good to go, and 3 who needed the nursery.
Is this recent batch of birth defects a lasting result of the nitrate poisoning the fathers (or mothers) suffered? Will it ever go away? I have a robust population but I'm wondering if I'll need to buy some new stock that wasn't subjected to the nitrates, to keep my numbers going.
Nutrition is very good, so I don't think that's the problem. They get enriched bbs and copepods (tig and tisbe) daily.




