Starfish

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xnikki118x

Guest
I've kept and/or had friends who successfully kept the following stars in a reef tank:
orange/red linkia
blue linkia
brittle star
serpent star
A while back I had a chocolate chip star and it ate my mushroom colony.
Moral of the story: always do your research! :) Hope this helps.
 

who dey

Active Member
i know the chick your talkinabout. i think it's the owners daughter, could be a good or bad thing. if he likes you he'll hook you up, if not he may kill your fish!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!outtahere, early risin!!!!!!!!good luck
 

soapbubble

New Member
Thanks for all your help. I'll check out the new Just About Fish soon. Ick in the front tank? That can't be good!
I don't think that girl is his daughter. She doesn't look like him? I've popped in there a few times and seen her there but just wasn't sure if she was working or just hanging out. Anyhow, she's really pretty and has a nice bod:yes: I'll try and ask her a question if I see her again.
 

ophiura

Active Member
PLEASE do lots of reasearch on seastars before purchase!!
Most reef safe stars are VERY DELICATE and need special acclimation and care. They should NOT go in a tank younger than 6 months, IMO, and conditions should be pristine (especially specific gravity around 1.026). They need long acclimations (generally 4+ hours).
Now before anyone says it, YES there are exceptions...people will write and say "I didn't do anything and its fine" but many or even MOST of these stars die from introduction to young, immature tanks without proper acclimation. A hole heck of a lot die at the LFS...so be sure you either get one right out of the bag (before going into dealer tanks) or one that has been at the LFS for at least a week and shows no whitish patches.
One can not assume that they will have the exceptional seastar that doesn't need acclimation and will take to spot feeding.
Reef safe stars can not be spot fed and must have access to lots of LR. Many or most will either die in the first month (acclimation shock) or in 8-12 months of starvation. People thing they died of disease, or were eaten by something. But in all likelihood they starved, as they do not eat algae and detritus as people say. If they did, we would all have a bunch of them happily munching in our tanks.
Success with a reef safe star such as a Linckia or Fromia should only be claimed after 1 year....the amount of time it takes a healthy wild caught animal to starve to death.
Blue Linckia, IMO, should not go in tanks under 100g with at least that much LR....again, there are exceptions, but this should not be counted on. Orange, purple and burgundy "Linckia" may be OK in 55-100g tanks if the smaller has lots of LR and only one star. I generally recommend only keeping one specimen of these stars as the compete for limited food. The only Linckia suitable, IMO, for reef tanks under 55g is Linckia multiflora, a smaller animal. Some others get by, but I don't recommend them.
Sand sifter stars, in most cases, will starve to death in 8-12 months after consuming all the beneficial critters in a sand bed. Some will take to spot feeding, but in general, I do not recommend keeping this star. They disintegrate, and people assume they are being attacked by something (hermits).
All brittlestars and serpentstars are suitable, but the green is a known predator. The bright red large brittlestar/serpent Ophioderma squamosissimum
should only be kept in pristine mature reef tanks and needs long acclimation. Most die at this point. All brittle/serpentstars should be spot fed.
Chocolate chips, generals,and red africans are not reef safe and are predators of snails, corals, clams, scallops and any slow moving or sessile invertebrate.
 

ctgretzky9

Member
I have 2 orange linkia and 2 brittle stars in the 125, and 1 orange and 1 brittle in the 60 hex. All are around 2 yrs old give or take as I purchased all of them within about a month or so of eachother.
Never any problems with them and the reef.
I do spot feed them occasionally when I see them out in the open-more for fun than the fact they may possibly be hungry at all. I got some good grabbers at the lfs, and the kids love to see the brittle stars grab the food and "curl" it up and under themselves.
The orange linkias are harder to spot feed, and most of the time I let them be since they seem to love being on the glass more tahn anywhere else!
With them, I grab some of the frozen food after it is thawed, and shake it a little in front of them in the flow of the water. They do react most of the time and lift an arm or two and "capture" some of the food that floats by.
 

acekjd83

Member
the guy at the LFS seemed pretty gung ho about the sand sifter... i really like the star, and dont want to lose it... what should i feed it?:nope:
 

ophiura

Active Member
It is a popular star...but its ability to clean sand is a misconception. It is cleaning it of good critters. Also, when they die, people assume it is for other reasons, and not the unfortunate one. The LFS probably wasn't misleading you or anything. They are popular beasts.
Try feeding it bits of shrimp, shrimp pellets...meaty things that you can place near it. Hopefully you'll have one that will take to the feedings! :)
 

who dey

Active Member
question should be what don't i do. Sales, new product engineering, planning, staffing, process improvment, equipment upgrades, shipping receiving, maintain IT, source low cost raw materials and the list goes on and on.......
 

soapbubble

New Member
Whoa...you sound busy! I think I am going to try and hit Wet Pets later in the week if possible. I'll try and dig up a girl to take with me to shake his prices down! LOL! Maybe that girl at the store will be my date for the day and she'll help me out.
 

ophiura

Active Member

Originally posted by ctgretzky9
The orange linkias are harder to spot feed, and most of the time I let them be since they seem to love being on the glass more tahn anywhere else!
With them, I grab some of the frozen food after it is thawed, and shake it a little in front of them in the flow of the water. They do react most of the time and lift an arm or two and "capture" some of the food that floats by.

Cool info, thanks for telling us! :D
 
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