Paul B said:They are very common on the east coast. I collected a dozen last week. This pair I collected in NY are spawning. You can see the female transfering the eggs to the male.
They lived a couple of years and I raised the fry to adulthood and spawned them also. The problem with seahorses is that they have no real stomach and need to be fed a few times a day, preferably all day. Brine shrimp is not a good diet but it was all I fed mine and they seemed to thrive but I needed a lot of brine shrimp. I even invented and patented a seahorse feeder which fed them live brine all day. I sold 6,000 of them.
Paul B said:They are very common on the east coast. I collected a dozen last week. This pair I collected in NY are spawning. You can see the female transfering the eggs to the male.
They lived a couple of years and I raised the fry to adulthood and spawned them also. The problem with seahorses is that they have no real stomach and need to be fed a few times a day, preferably all day. Brine shrimp is not a good diet but it was all I fed mine and they seemed to thrive but I needed a lot of brine shrimp. I even invented and patented a seahorse feeder which fed them live brine all day. I sold 6,000 of them.