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I don’t think so I’ve had two different people here that have many many yrs experience n both said almost same thing. All I know is he’s part of my family. No matter what gender he isLooks like juvenile northern erectus IMO.
Well that's an odd response to someone offering help, I'm pretty sure whatever it is that it doesn't like rainbow gravel and cheap plastic plants, but that's just my opinion.I don’t think so I’ve had two different people here that have many many yrs experience n both said almost same thing. All I know is he’s part of my family. No matter what gender he is
@Lucie would know
I'm not sure who you had help but h. combs (tiger tails) dont have cirri. I'm positive its erectus and likely the northern variety as it has a short snout. Combs have very distinctive coronets (or rather lack thereof) and bright white/yellow tail stripes which yours doesnt have.I don’t think so I’ve had two different people here that have many many yrs experience n both said almost same thing. All I know is he’s part of my family. No matter what gender he is
I missed the Jersey part of your post. Comes are native to the Philippines/Thailand, would be highly highly highly unlikely you would encounter Comes off shore in Jersey.
U think makes sense because all my others are Erectus but what’s with the spikes on head. None of my others have thatErectus
After different trials with wild and captive bred, honestly they don t care if the gravel is multicolore and if they have plastic plants.Well that's an odd response to someone offering help, I'm pretty sure whatever it is that it doesn't like rainbow gravel and cheap plastic plants, but that's just my opinion.
Thank you this is Great infoEverybody is right, it s a Hippocampus erectus, northern stain obviously.
You can sometimes find northern stains in south florida also, in the wild.
The extensions are skin extentions called "cirri". Usually quite common on juveniles, they loose them in captivity when maturing, but not always. It help them camouflage better. So in a tank, with no micro (ugly algaes) or finely ramified macro algaes and the absence of predators, they have no use to display them for camouflage purpose
These are all brothers and sisters, some never developped any, some had then loose them, but at the end a very few keep them