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Endangered Sea Dragon Lays Eggs

June 13th 2008 14:57
Okay, so this one really isn't a pet that you'll find in your average at-home aquarium, but it deserves its own notice.

So the big aquarium in Georgia (the Georgia Aquatium) spoted about 70 eggs on their male sea dragon.

This will be the third time that the rare sea dragon has ever laid eggs in captivity in the U.S., making this a monumental birth.

They believe that there's somethign that triggers the species to want to mate, but no one knows exactly what that is.

The aquarium employees recently thinned out the plants and changed the lighting in the 18" sea dragons' tank in hope that it would give them room, and it worked.


In the wild, the survival rate for sea dragons is pretty low, but in captivity it's about 60%. This is just another species on the endangered list. Unfortunately pollution and human population growth in Australia has caused the decline of hte species.

Of all the aquariums in the world, there are only about 50 of them who have sea dragons in their facilities.


During mating, the female lays dozens of eggs and then transfers them to the male's tail.
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Is your child ready for a pet?

May 13th 2008 22:48
There are so many pets out there that children tend to love to play with and pet. But is your child ready for the responsibility of having his own pet?

Pets are big responisbility even if you opt for just a small tank with one Betta fish- feeding schedules, water changes, chemicals, etc. It can be a big deal, and more than likely you, as the parent, have a lot on your plate already and would rather not add the responsibility of a pet.

The only thing that you can do is measure your child. Unfortunately there's no right way to tell if your child is at the same level as someone else's. I can't say that at 7 year old every child is ready for his first guinea pig, but I will admit some are.


It's up to you as the parent to determine whether or not your child is ready to take on the responsibility of caring for a new pet. But, at the same time you still have to make sure that the child IS properly feeding and caring for the pet. When it comes down to it, you just can't say "Well, it's his puppy, I assumed he was taking care of it." That's how you end up in jail for animal cruelty... So, you're still going to have to back track and make sure that the child is still being responsible for the care of the pet he had to have.

That doesn't mean that all the responsibility is your, it just means that you need to oversee what's going on.

You need to determine your child's maturity and responsibility level before you even opt to bring in a new pet to the family.
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