|
10/17/2010, 10:17 PM | #1 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Kings Mountain, NC
Posts: 912
|
sea hares & black mollies
1. does anyone keep a sea hare and feed it, and if so what do you feed it?
2. Will acclimated black mollies breed in a SW tank? Will most fish eat the mollie babies?
__________________
Faith, hope, and love abide; but the greatest of these is love. Current Tank Info: 40g breeder DT LR & Macro Algae - 2" sand, 6 T5s & 2 fans in hood; 30gL sump/fuge w/MSX 200 skimmer & other equip.; (mangroves in DT - roots are great look) |
10/17/2010, 11:19 PM | #2 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 8
|
How do you aclimate fw mollie's or guppys to sw? I know that fish will eat the fry, I live in utah and there is a big saltwater scubba lake called seabase that has thousands of mollies that breed and feed all there fish.
|
10/18/2010, 12:09 PM | #3 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Kings Mountain, NC
Posts: 912
|
bump - does no one keep a sea hare or mollies for live food?
__________________
Faith, hope, and love abide; but the greatest of these is love. Current Tank Info: 40g breeder DT LR & Macro Algae - 2" sand, 6 T5s & 2 fans in hood; 30gL sump/fuge w/MSX 200 skimmer & other equip.; (mangroves in DT - roots are great look) |
10/18/2010, 01:02 PM | #4 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Brunswick, Ohio
Posts: 3,306
|
I have seen people just drop adult mollies into SW and they adapt. However I would recommend drip acclimating them to reduce the stress. I assume when the babies are born they will already be adapted to SW since the parents are there. But yet the other fish including the parents will probably eat them.
For the sea hares, I don't have experience with them, sorry. hopefully someone else does!
__________________
equipment: Eshopps psk-200 skimmer, Mag 12 pump, 30gal sump, 2x 300w Finnex heaters, glass-holes 1500gph overflow kit with 3/4" return kits, 72" 8x36w t-5 AquaticLife light, 66lbs of LR, 150lbs of tropic eden reeflakes, 2 Koralia Evo 1400, JBJ ATO, BRS dual GFO/carbon reactors, Hydor smartwave Current Tank Info: 125gallon |
10/18/2010, 01:17 PM | #5 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: 808 State
Posts: 1,356
|
I had a sea hare for about a month. It ate all my algae and that's all they ate. When he was done eating all my algae I passed him off to another club member who had algae in his tank. He had it for a couple weeks and it died even though he still had a lot of food for him.
|
10/18/2010, 01:24 PM | #6 |
Go Spurs Go!!!
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Meadowlakes Texas
Posts: 13,357
|
Search function is a wonderful thing, if it is used. :-)
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/se...archid=2819749 I kept Black Mollies for years as a food source for an S. Tapetum anemone and it works great once they are acclimated. They do tend to breed better in salt than in fresh. Black Mollies are estuary fish and are frequently found in fresh, brackish and full salt areas. No help with sea hares, never had them and probably never will.
__________________
Jack No One has ever been seriously injured by using the search function. Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be a convenience store, not a government agency. Current Tank Info: Reefing the Pentagon. |
10/18/2010, 02:13 PM | #7 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Ottawa Canada
Posts: 29
|
i have mollies now in salt. just dropped them. it has only been 3 weeks. no breeding yet.
|
10/18/2010, 02:19 PM | #8 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 101
|
Quote:
I asked a similar question and there were several other members of my local forum that had had one for a year and didn't feed anything extra. I would try another one except I have no doubt my huma huma aka human garbage can would probably eat it. |
|
10/18/2010, 02:46 PM | #9 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: US
Posts: 237
|
I keep a male and two female mollies in my sump. Every month or so, each female releases about 15 babies each, which go to the DT and make a nice snack for my cardinals. I drip acclimated them for about 24 hours and they are fine.
Bryan |
10/18/2010, 02:59 PM | #10 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Arizona
Posts: 4,627
|
Yes you acclimate mollies to salt water and they will breed just fine. There are some really cool mollies you can keep in a reef tank. I like gold dust mollies. I have seen stuff on tv where mollies went from the fresh water streams out to the reef. They do this when the streams reseed. It was cool seeing all the different sized/age mollies all over a wild reef. I have wondered if platies would live in salt water as I has many breeding in my fresh water tank.
|
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Sea Hare staying hidden | coraltankmaster | Other Invertebrates | 3 | 12/22/2009 05:21 PM |
compatabilty- sea hare & smallish blue leg hermit | cartouche | New to the Hobby | 1 | 12/07/2009 11:53 AM |
Sea Urchin & Sea Hare? | FishboyBT | Other Invertebrates | 2 | 07/04/2007 04:58 PM |
Mr. Sea Hare & Lettuce Nudibranch | ReefObsessor805 | Other Invertebrates | 1 | 07/03/2006 05:12 PM |