you mean Sea Horses right?
While many aquarium hobbyists will keep seahorses as pets, seahorses collected from the wild tend to fare poorly in a home aquarium. They will eat only live foods such as brine shrimp and are prone to stress in an aquarium, which lowers the efficiency of their immune systems and makes them susceptible to disease.
In recent years, however, captive breeding of seahorses has become increasingly widespread. These seahorses survive better in captivity, and they are less likely to carry diseases. These seahorses will eat mysid shrimp, and they do not experience the shock and stress of being taken out of the wild and placed in a small aquarium. Although captive-bred seahorses are more expensive, they survive better than wild seahorses, and take no toll on wild populations.
Seahorses should be kept in an aquarium to themselves, or with compatible tank-mates. Seahorses are slow feeders, and in an aquarium with fast, aggressive feeders, the seahorses will be edged out in the competition for food. Special care should be given to ensure that all individuals obtain enough food at feeding times.
Seahorses can co-exist with many species of shrimp and other bottom-feeding creatures. Fish from the goby family also make good tank-mates. Some species are especially dangerous to the slow-moving seahorses and should be avoided completely: eels, tangs, triggerfish, squid, octopus, and sea anemones.
Animals sold as "freshwater seahorses" are usually the closely related pipefish, of which a few species live in the lower reaches of rivers. The supposed true "freshwater seahorse" called Hippocampus aimei was not a real species, but a name sometimes used for individuals of Barbour's seahorse and Hedgehog seahorse. The latter is a species commonly found in brackish waters, but not actually a Freshwater Fish.
The meaning of the word "hores" is from the Spanish language and means hours or time. It is from the Catalonians which are a group of people in northern Spain.
The food a Flatback Turtle consumes varies. They eat alot of sea weed, they eat other invertibrates, sea cucumbors, mollusks, jellyfish, prawns, and bryozoans.
Yes, they can kill you, but it is very rare and it depends where they hurt you and how your body reacts to their venom.
No, butterfly fish do not typically eat sea anemones. They primarily feed on coral polyps, small crustaceans, and other invertebrates. While some fish may consume sea anemones, it is not a common part of the butterfly fish diet.
no it doesn't
No.
tubesteak
most likely hay
Anything that a normal horse would eat like grass and hay and drink water
horses can eat apples, sugar, carrots, and grass, but dont feed your horse sugar TOO often
black berrys and animals like deer,cow,hores
Well, sea horses cant swim their tail helps them they hold on to sea wead with their tails and they are also the slowest animal that lives in the water. Anyway they eat small fishes, they hold on to sea wead with their tails and wait until they see fishes come by if no fishes come by then they go look for fishes.
There is no such thing as a hore or hores
animal herbevores like hores-are eat grass that is herbevores and goat,cow and atch...
No one. No Trojan hores were ever built
it is a shot that you can give to your hores incase your hores gets sick
Up to 30 miles per hour and its spelled horse not hores.