pipefish

scooby_drew1013

New Member
i have two pipefish. one is a banded and at the store they said my other one was a pygmy but i think it is blue striped and i was wondering what was the best way to feed the pipefish. i was instructed to feed them this specific type of but i forgot the name because i threw out the package. should i get a continuous brine hatchery because they are not eating the food right away
 

drty811

New Member
i heard to feed them cyclo-eez. just what i heard though , not sure never did any research on them . cool looking fish. hope this helps good luck.
 

hooterhead

New Member
yeah try cyclo-peez. my LFS has two bluestriped that i'm thinking of buying. that's what they are eating. every once in a while they will go for frozen mysis.
 

Abarnswell

New Member
i was wondering what was the best way to feed the pipefish
scooby, here is a wonderful website on Pipefish (and Seahorses). http://www.seahorses.de/index.htm. You'll find info on them there. It's a great site.

Also, check here: http://www.seahorse.org/index.shtml. They cover pipefishes as well as seahorses, and have a forum for both.

I am very fond of pipefish and seahorses. In fact, I am preparing a tank for a pair of captive-bred hippocampus zulu-lulus.
 

incysor

New Member
April,

I don't want to sound harsh, but judging by the questions you've been asking I'd say you're very new to the hobby. That being the case I'd wait a year before attempting the ponies. All seahorses are considered difficult to keep. Since the zulu-lulus are expensive, and require a lot of specialized attention I'd wait until you've had at least a year to get a better understanding of marine tanks in general, while you're researching the specific needs for these ponies.

B
 

incysor

New Member
scooby_drew1013 said:
i have two pipefish. one is a banded and at the store they said my other one was a pygmy but i think it is blue striped and i was wondering what was the best way to feed the pipefish. i was instructed to feed them this specific type of but i forgot the name because i threw out the package. should i get a continuous brine hatchery because they are not eating the food right away
Mine goes for brine, small mysis, and really digs the cyclopeeze. When we first got it, it was so small that cyclopeeze was really the only thing it could get down. It was amusing watching it tow around a mysis or brine shimp that was simply too large to go down.

B
 

Abarnswell

New Member
incysor said:
April, I don't want to sound harsh, but judging by the questions you've been asking I'd say you're very new to the hobby. That being the case I'd wait a year before attempting the ponies.B
Hi, B! Sorry, I just now saw this post. You're right. I am new to this hobby. You're not being harsh -- I appreciate the advice. I appreciate EVERYTHING you say. I am a fast (read: obsessive) learner, though.

scooby_drew1013 said:
have two pipefish. one is a banded and at the store they said my other one was a pygmy but i think it is blue striped and i was wondering what was the best way to feed the pipefish.
Scooby_drew1013: here is a pic of Blue Stripe Pipefish:



By the way, most pipefish do better in mated pairs. If you can find a M/F pair of one species, that would be better than two singles of different species. And don't put two males Blue Stripes together -- they will get aggressive with each other. It's pretty easy to sex them, at least with the Blue Stripes. The males have little tiny "bumps" on their snouts, and their belly is one long concave ridge (which is where they store the eggs), whereas the female has a smooth rounded belly.

Blue Stripes are rather petite as far as pipefish go. They have very small mouths, so they need smaller food. I have a mated pair of them (they act like an old married couple). In the beginning, I had a hard time feeding mine. Mine will eat Cyclopeeze (thanks, B!), which basically are frozen copepods, and live baby brine shrimp and live copepods (their favorite!). Mine will not eat adult brine shrimp (live or frozen), nor mysis (frozen). Adult shrimp are just too big for them, at least for mine anyway -- they really do have teeny tiny mouths. (I have seahorses, too, which I feed enriched live brine shrimp to, and frozen mysis, and my Blue Stripes ignore the adult brine shrimp and the Mysis completely.)

What mine LOVE to eat are live copepods. Blue Stripes are active hunters. They love to hunt among the rocks, plants, and glass for copepods. Mine don't eat out of the water column. They wait for something on the rocks, plants, glass, etc... Even the Cyclopeeze has to hit the plants, rocks, etc... before they'll eat it. I've been buying live cultures of copepods and putting them in the tank for my Blue Stripes.

I've also just started cultures of copepods and rotifers as well as microalgae (platymonas), to see if I can culture them myself, make my own green water to culture them in, and provide a steady input of them into the tank. It's hard to tell how that's going because they (they copepods and the rotifers) are so darn small -- way smaller than baby brine shrimp. At least you can SEE baby brine shrimp!

In the meanwhile, I buy live copepods to put in the tank. There are quite a few websites that sell live copepods. Unfortunately, it's not inexpensive. Cyclopeeze, however, is quite nutritious (they are copepods, too) and is a good food for them. That's the saving grace here; Cyclopeeze is easy to manage and store and feed, etc... Buy the frozen, rather than the freeze dried. Frozen is "cleaner" and pollutes the water much less than freeze dried.

If you end up with a Blue Stripe, let me know. We can compare notes. Put in some live plants with your pipefish. Mine sleep, every single night, side by side, vertically, resting in the concave curve of a Maiden's Fan plant. As soon as the ambient light in the room goes off, they head straight for "their" plant. They really are enjoyable to watch.
 

incysor

New Member
Good info folks.

April, it sounds like yours are doing great. I've just got the single guy, but I'm hoping to find a female for him at some point. One of the LFS get's them semi-regularly. I'm considering making my 30g cube mostly a seahorse/pipefish tank. But I want to do a bit more reading on the subject and would like to get a refugium built before I make the move to the seahorses.

I'd second, or third, or fourth everyones reccomendation on cyclopeeze, especially with the bluestripes. There just isn't an easier food available that they can fit in their mouths.

B
 

Chubosco

New Member
Hey, Abarnswell. I noticed you have a 5 gal pod factory. Can you tell us ALL about it! I am very interested in this.
 

Abarnswell

New Member
My blue stripe pipefish eats primarily copepods, very small amphipods, and newly hatched baby brine shrimp. This particular species of pipes have such tiny mouths; they can only eat very small foods. And most pipes are wild caught and often they only want live foods. Sometimes they can be trained to frozen foods, but not always. My blue stripe does not take to frozen well. Ocassionally she'll eat some frozen cyclopeeze, but not often.

Other, larger mouthed pipes can often take adult brine shrimp, but you have to enrich them very well, as brine shrimp alone (without enrichment) have no nutritional value.
 
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