flower
Well-Known Member
The bat star. The only thing I ever read on them is that they eat algae and are great scavengers. I have two, and sadly my tank developed a huge pile of cyanobacteria that began last week. It was getting pretty thick on my sand bed, and I was dreading the step ladder climb to remove as much as possible... my bat star crawled over it last night, by this morning it's 100% gone.
I have these stars because I have a cold aquarium for the potbelly seahorses I keep, and was told they would just fine with them, they do feed a little my macroalgae but never depleted it. Seahorses are very messy eaters, and I don't have high water flow in their tank...a perfect storm for cyanobacteria.
Now that I know they are cyano eaters, I have been searching for more info on them...I can't find anything that designates them as only cold water critters. I don't think they are reef safe, so fish only systems. I do have live rock and peppermint shrimp, which it hasn't bothered at all. The seahorse is perfectly fine with them. These stars at least 5 inches in diameter, so they are not little guys.
I don't know if they can live in a warmer tank, but maybe somebody could shed some light on the possibility.
I have these stars because I have a cold aquarium for the potbelly seahorses I keep, and was told they would just fine with them, they do feed a little my macroalgae but never depleted it. Seahorses are very messy eaters, and I don't have high water flow in their tank...a perfect storm for cyanobacteria.
Now that I know they are cyano eaters, I have been searching for more info on them...I can't find anything that designates them as only cold water critters. I don't think they are reef safe, so fish only systems. I do have live rock and peppermint shrimp, which it hasn't bothered at all. The seahorse is perfectly fine with them. These stars at least 5 inches in diameter, so they are not little guys.
I don't know if they can live in a warmer tank, but maybe somebody could shed some light on the possibility.