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02/07/2010, 05:22 PM | #1 |
Moved On
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: La Digue, Seychelles
Posts: 103
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Rare Seahorses Galore!
Personally I would love to have these, but I don't know if that is allowed. Is it possible for some dealer to work out some paperwork w/ CITES to get them imported? I mean you can get Chaetodon daedalmas from Izu Japan where Hippocampus sindonis live. They are listed as Data Deficient as are most Sygnathids. I do know however, that the trade of wild seahorses has been banned and the trade of wild specimens is strictly controlled. Lets hope we can get out hands on these in the near future huh?
- Painted Seahorse, Hippocampus sindonis http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/10083/0 Big-bellied Seahorse, Hippocampus abdominalis Short-pouch pygmy pipehorse, Acentronura breviperula (Yes i said pipehorse. The are he evolutionary link between pipefish and seahorses.) Thorny seahorse, Hippocampus hystrix Cornetfish Family Fistulariidae Genus Fistularia Bluespotted cornetfish, Fistularia commersonii Rüppell, 1838 Pacific cornetfish, Fistularia corneta Gilbert & Starks, 1904 Red cornetfish, Fistularia petimba Lacepède, 1803 Cornet fish, Fistularia tabacaria Linnaeus, 1758 False Pipefish Solenostomus armatus (Weber, 1913) (Long-tailed Ghostpipefish) Solenostomus cyanopterus (Bleeker, 1854) (Robust Ghostpipefish, Blue-finned Ghostpipefish, Green Ghostpipefish) Solenostomus halimeda (Orr, Fritzsche and Randall, 2002) Solenostomus leptosoma (Tanaka, 1908) (Delicate Ghostpipefish) Solenostomus paradoxus (Pallas, 1770) (Ornate Ghostpipefish, Shortbodied Pipefish) Yes again im bringing up the pygmies because i want them so badly!!! Hippocampus bargibanti and Hippocampus denise And yes the most recently described Hippocampus sp. (pontohi) Check the Pontohis out here http://www.robertosozzani.it/Pontohi/contpontohiEn.html -Happy Reefing! |
02/07/2010, 05:44 PM | #2 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: rockaway nj
Posts: 66
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those seahorses are cool
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02/07/2010, 06:58 PM | #3 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Orlando(Wedgefield), Fl
Posts: 555
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Ghost Pipes are next to impossible to keep in aquariums and thus extremely rarely make it to the trade.
Pygmy seahorses have keeping issues as well as food must be very small and I read something the other day about them needing what the are camo'd as or else they get stressed out or something like that. I think you have a better chance of getting hold of these than ghost pipes. I know little to nothing about those horses except they are probably temperate species. I have books on them just dont have them memorized. This is idle musing but perhaps if you looked up Japanese online fish stores(surely they have them like we do) and hope one speaks English and then figure out the shipping thing. Definately would be costly but with the 10k you were going to be putting down on dragons Japanese seahorses should be chumpchange. What I would love to get hold of are a couple pairs of zebra sea horses. |
02/07/2010, 07:06 PM | #4 |
Moved On
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: La Digue, Seychelles
Posts: 103
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I don't believe blue harbor or b-box offer seahorses let alone painted seahorses. The only temperate seahorses in this list are the pot bellied and possibly the pipehorse. The Japanese stores are a good idea though I don't know of any other than B-box Aquaria and Blue Harbor
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02/08/2010, 09:27 AM | #5 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Amsterdam
Posts: 353
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Do you want to own them for breeding purposes or for bragging rights? The ghost pipes were available here last summer. All were dead within 8 weeks. There were some last week in the UK. Those die in the dealers tank. So in order for you to get your hands on one, a lot more will die before ever reaching your local wholesaler/reseller.
Best to leave them alone. Kind Regards, Tim |
02/08/2010, 09:41 AM | #6 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 10
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Gorgeous creatures. I have always wanted a seahorse but agree with the above poster...not worth all the deaths.
Thanks for posting |
02/08/2010, 09:44 AM | #7 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Sugar Grove, IL
Posts: 1,214
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Quote:
Until we can keep them with relatively low mortality I say it's best to leave these creatures in nature, or at the very worst in the hands of researchers and marine zoologists. |
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02/08/2010, 10:50 AM | #8 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Amsterdam
Posts: 353
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Quote:
Right now I have 8 H. reidi, 1 H. comes & 60 + H. zosterae. I did my research before I bought them. Everything I thought I knew about them were slightly outdated. But I took advice from people here & on sh.org. now I feel it is ok for me to give advise or feedback based on the 2.5 years that I have been keeping them. I really want the H. abdominalis: pot belly seahorse. But I know that I can not take care of them correctly. I do not want a large tank or a chiller. So I will not own one until I can meet their need & not shoe horn them to meet my needs. So Brettsreef, do some research & take the plunge. They are HIGHLY ADDICTIVE I really enjoy taking care of them & look forward to coming home to them. Kind Regards, Tim |
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02/09/2010, 06:21 AM | #9 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Amsterdam
Posts: 353
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I bought this DVD last year. Pygmy Seahorses, Pipfishes and Ghostpipefishes from redsea-images dot com. They flim them in the wild. On the vid with the ghostpipefish, it shows them close to the bottom drifting with the current.
I think you can ask any of the vendors on here to order it for you. Lastly please do not post the pics on here. They are copy righted. Tim |
Tags |
pipefish, pygmy seahorses, rare seahorses, seahorses |
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