Ophiura, or any other people who know about starfishies:

hairtrigger

Active Member
I saw that SWF is having a special in u-build it on Orange, AKA Red, Linkia stars. According to the description SWF gives, Orange Linkias are absolutly completely reef safe and only feed on algae on the aquarium glass and rockwork. Is this true? Because I know some stars eat corals and fish. I keep brittles but they don't mess with either. Are these Orange Linkias as reef safe, or is the "must have" description another sales tactic that isn't really accurate? Thanks!
Oh yeah, and if they are completely reef safe, can you keep more than one together? Thanks again. :cool:
 

leigh

Active Member
they need a ton of rock to feed off. i wouldn't even think about it unless you have a tremendous amount of rock-->on the order of hundreds of pounds...otherwise they slowly starve to death.
 

leigh

Active Member
Nas if you're really interested in stars read up on brittles/serpent stars. I have 3 and love them. (You just have to spot feed them and keep good care of the water conditions).
 

perchpsk

Member
the red serpent stars from this site are great additions.. They are reef safe, colorful and eat detritus or fish foods. The linkias are always tough to keep alive for more than a month or two.
 

hairtrigger

Active Member
Sweet these things rock then. And don't worry about them being hungry in my tank... I have a 200 gallon Oceanic system full of LR to keep him fat. One more thing though:
Are they definitely compatible with brittles, community fish, hermits, emeralds, etc? Basically reef creatures. Thanks!:cool:
 

perchpsk

Member
yeah they are safe. You probably wont see it too much though, once they find some good eats on your rockwork they tend to hide out for some time. I have a blue linckia that disapears for a week at a time deep in the live rock grazing. It will not bother your fish, inverts, corals, nor should they harm it.
 

hairtrigger

Active Member
Nice. Red serpents, blue, orange. I am going to read up a lot more about them. I never really researched stars too much because I thought there were so many sketchy kinds. Enough to discourage me anyways. Cool. And I don't mind terribly if I dont see it all the time. Part of the good times is nosing around, peering in all the rockwork and whatnot. :D
 

ophiura

Active Member

Originally posted by perchpsk
the red serpent stars from this site are great additions.. They are reef safe, colorful and eat detritus or fish foods. The linkias are always tough to keep alive for more than a month or two.

Just one thing to mention. These red serpents are very delicate, they most delicate serpentstar in the hobby, and require very long acclimations. They are also quite rare in the wild. They should also be spot fed, IMO, unless you feed pretty heavily. Depends on the situation. Anyway, not a beginner star and not particularly easy...though once established, they do quite well. It is in the introduction where things tend to go wrong.
Linckia do relatively well in large mature reef systems over 100g and 6 months + in age. The key is pristine water parameters, proper salinity (1.025-1.026) and loads of LR. 100 lbs min for one. For best results, they should not be kept more than one to a typical tank (unless the tank is very large). Exceptions include Linkia multiflora, but still it is best to keep only one and allow it to reproduce on its own.
If the star dies in one month, it was improper acclimation. These stars all require 4+ hours acclimations.
Most stars take 9-12 months to die of starvation, a common problem because they can not be spot fed and probably eat more than simply algae on LR. In fact, they most certainly do, because people with loads of algae can still have starving seastars. So it may be the type of algae or something....
FWIW, no brittlestar or serpentstar can be guaranteed reef safe. All will eat if they are hungry. This is usually not a problem, but for any given individual in any given situation, it is a possibility.
But it is true of many "Linckia" stars as well. Most reef safe stars are happily consuming little critters you may not be aware of, including sponges. This is why the amount of LR is critical, and why most will not eat various prepared algaes. So most stars will eat a variety of things...it simply comes down to your definition of reef safe. The purple Linckia, which is typically Tamaria stria, has rarely (though it is hyped) been reported to eat certain soft corals. Few will bother crabs, shrimp, etc....
 

hairtrigger

Active Member
Hey Op, thanks much. That really helps. I actually spot feed my brittles quite often. They are fearless. The things wrap around my hand to take food out. It's awesome.
I hear you on the acclimation. If I buy some more stars, I'll drip acclimate them to make sure they do well. So far, I ve had these brittles do fine since I bought them seven months or so ago. One of them devoured my dead yellow tang to the absolute skeleton before I noticed he'd kicked it. So they're good eaters, but avoid my live fish because I feed em so much.
Sounds like it might be worth trying one or two. I may hold off on the red serpents to be safe though. Thanks again!
:cool:
 

ophiura

Active Member
Oh, they are good serpents, but very delicate. That isn't generally something people assoicate with them. But I have seen many, many die....
 
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