asterina stars

Returning to our example of the common, small Asterina species found in some reef tanks, these sea stars in recent years have suffered, unfairly I might add, the reputation of being risky or just plain un-safe in the reef. This is interesting because for many years prior to that, they were not only regarded as harmless, but beneficial! What happened? Did they all change their voter registrations overnight? No, the answer really is quite simple. It also explains why some other "controversial" reef invertebrates have contradictory reputations like Mithrax/Mithraculus crabs. Many such creatures are opportunistic feeders. While they favor one type of prey that is convenient or popular to us, like sand bed worms, brown diatoms or bubble algae, they will adapt to eating other food items following the reduction or absence of a preferred food item. Thus, the reef keeper with a persistent growth of microalgae in a garden reef display will likely have less trouble with misbehaving omnivores than another aquarist with an aggressively skimmed and scrubbed tank that supports little growth of the matter. In a phrase, the hungrier that a so-called "reef-safe" creature gets, the less "reef-safe" that creature becomes. In the case of Asterina, many years ago during the bare-bottomed, nutrient poor Berlin style era of reef keeping, reef husbandry with early protein skimmers and limited nutrient export processes was not as efficient as it is today; diatoms and other nutritious growths grew quickly in our tanks. And Asterina were not considered un-safe by hobbyists.
Sorry for the long thread. I have one of these in my tank and was doing some reading to see if they were truly the coral eaters they are accused of being. I thought I would ask the group fof theit opinions on this topic.
 

mgatdog

Member
Originally Posted by renogaw
http:///forum/post/2944688
there are tons of different asterinas, and i even have coralline eaters.
They have clean my 55 of almost all of the coraline.
Every time I do a water change I siphon the little pain in the ---- out. But i can't keep up !
 

mr_x

Active Member
no. because i have to remove coralline regularly. i'd rather not have it. what's the big deal about coralline anyway? i'd rather cover the rock with coral, than algae.
 

renogaw

Active Member
before i got my t5's i never had coral growth and all i had was coralline hehe.
but i completely agree with you--it is a pain to have to keep cleaning it.
 
Well I kept mine in the tank(don't know what species) because people said the wouldn't hurt my coral. WRONG! These little shi-s ate my green star polyps and even my zoos! The good thing is they are slow moving so they are easy to catch. And yes I'm sure they were eating the coral. Once they were removed the coral polyps grew back.
 
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