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Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
I've always heard the green serpent stars are NOT reef safe. I have a
brown brittle star that has been absolutely fine with my anemones. He is at least 10 inches across. I've had him for at least 6 months. He tends to hide most of the time and comes out at feeding times. After Chip made a play for the anemones he moved on to try to eat the brown star. Its interesting watching the brittle star "run" around the tank. I did a quick search for the match to my brown brittle before the previous post and couldn't find any reference to anything other than the green serpent star. That is why I posted I was going to head for the LFS and get a serpent star. When I make the trip Friday I'm going to try for another brown brittle star. At one time I had about 100 little baby stars crawling in and out of all the cracks in the rocks. They were awesome to watch. Then I brought home a Green Emperor Goby and 3 Yellow Tangs. The stars quickly disappeared. I still find a few hiding in my Fluval canister at cleaning times. BTW - I would post more scientific names if I new them. I really need to figure out all I have and keep track of it so I can accurately describe any issues when they arise. Wayne Sallee wrote: There is a green star fish that is often called a brittle star, and sometimes called a serpent star. It's nature is like half way between the two. In some ways it's not as bad as a serpent star, but it is not as good as a brittle star. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets George wrote on 12/21/2006 5:18 PM: "Wayne Sallee" wrote in message ink.net... Get a brittle, not a serpent. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Brittle stars will eat anemones as well. At least my green one does, especially if they aren't doing too well. George |
Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
"Wayne Sallee" wrote in message nk.net... There is a green star fish that is often called a brittle star, and sometimes called a serpent star. It's nature is like half way between the two. In some ways it's not as bad as a serpent star, but it is not as good as a brittle star. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Here is what my brittle star looks like (what you can see of it - note: This image is several years old, so it is now larger than it was in this image). http://tinyurl.com/y9f5cq George |
Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
Yep, that's the creature.
Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets George wrote on 12/21/2006 10:55 PM: "Wayne Sallee" wrote in message nk.net... There is a green star fish that is often called a brittle star, and sometimes called a serpent star. It's nature is like half way between the two. In some ways it's not as bad as a serpent star, but it is not as good as a brittle star. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Here is what my brittle star looks like (what you can see of it - note: This image is several years old, so it is now larger than it was in this image). http://tinyurl.com/y9f5cq George |
Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
Wayne Sallee wrote:
Yep, that's the creature. Hm, I have a 12" version of this critter that came with the tank. I knew it was a brittle star, but I couldn't nail down the exact type. I feed it a chunk of shrimp now and then. I also have two missing yellow tail damsils. Not that i care about them, but I'm thinking this guy is the culprit as they liked to hide and sleep in the crevices. Seems like I've been removing lots of animals lately. --Kurt |
Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
Yea, sometimes they are called brittle stars, and some
times they are call serpent. They are like half way between. They are a risk to a reef tank. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets KurtG wrote on 12/22/2006 5:18 PM: Wayne Sallee wrote: Yep, that's the creature. Hm, I have a 12" version of this critter that came with the tank. I knew it was a brittle star, but I couldn't nail down the exact type. I feed it a chunk of shrimp now and then. I also have two missing yellow tail damsils. Not that i care about them, but I'm thinking this guy is the culprit as they liked to hide and sleep in the crevices. Seems like I've been removing lots of animals lately. --Kurt |
Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
"Wayne Sallee" wrote in message nk.net... Yea, sometimes they are called brittle stars, and some times they are call serpent. They are like half way between. They are a risk to a reef tank. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Umm, Wayne. That IS a green brittle star. It is Ophiarachna incrassata. It is not a true starfish. Starfish are in the class Asteroidea. Brittle stars are in the class Ophiuroidea. Yes, large ones are a risk to dedicated reef tanks, and can gobble up one's favorite fish (or shrimp, certain corals, and even large anemones). Those who do keep them in such tanks would be advised to keep them well fed. They relish bits of shrimp. They move around quite rapidly when they want to, and are one of the few types of echinoderms that have multiple lenses for light gathering (some say that they can actually see images, but I have no proof one way or the other with this claim). Having said that, my tank is not a full-blown reef tank. It contains mostly live rock and sea sand, with a few hardy corals that came with the rock, a colony of star polyps, one leather coral, a few extraneous small anemones, and assorted cleaner crews, including snails, limpets, small hermit crabs, and assorted small crustaceans and feather worms (I've also seen some glass sponges browing in my refugium). I also have two breeding maroon clownfish that get along with the brittle star just fine. I've had the female since 1991. I've had the brittle star since 1994. Anything that it can/will eat it has already done so. It has definitely been one of the more interesting animals I've ever kept. And I've been surprised at how hardy it is. They are being intensely studied because of their very strong immune system and incredible ability to regenerate their body parts. The lenses of their "eyes" are also being studied by the telecom industry because these calcite lenses apparently have properties that make them a good candidate for use with fiber optic systems (if they can figure out how to mass synthesize them in high quality). George |
Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
There is a difference between the "green brittle", and
what we all call a brittle star. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets George wrote on 12/22/2006 10:11 PM: "Wayne Sallee" wrote in message nk.net... Yea, sometimes they are called brittle stars, and some times they are call serpent. They are like half way between. They are a risk to a reef tank. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Umm, Wayne. That IS a green brittle star. It is Ophiarachna incrassata. It is not a true starfish. Starfish are in the class Asteroidea. Brittle stars are in the class Ophiuroidea. Yes, large ones are a risk to dedicated reef tanks, and can gobble up one's favorite fish (or shrimp, certain corals, and even large anemones). Those who do keep them in such tanks would be advised to keep them well fed. They relish bits of shrimp. They move around quite rapidly when they want to, and are one of the few types of echinoderms that have multiple lenses for light gathering (some say that they can actually see images, but I have no proof one way or the other with this claim). Having said that, my tank is not a full-blown reef tank. It contains mostly live rock and sea sand, with a few hardy corals that came with the rock, a colony of star polyps, one leather coral, a few extraneous small anemones, and assorted cleaner crews, including snails, limpets, small hermit crabs, and assorted small crustaceans and feather worms (I've also seen some glass sponges browing in my refugium). I also have two breeding maroon clownfish that get along with the brittle star just fine. I've had the female since 1991. I've had the brittle star since 1994. Anything that it can/will eat it has already done so. It has definitely been one of the more interesting animals I've ever kept. And I've been surprised at how hardy it is. They are being intensely studied because of their very strong immune system and incredible ability to regenerate their body parts. The lenses of their "eyes" are also being studied by the telecom industry because these calcite lenses apparently have properties that make them a good candidate for use with fiber optic systems (if they can figure out how to mass synthesize them in high quality). George |
Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
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Stars and Clowns and Anemones, Oh My.
One is behavior that we were discussing, but also look a
the visible difference. A serpent star is smooth, and a brittle star has lot's of appendages, and a "green brittle/serpent" is smooth with *some* appendages, but not nearly as much as a brittle star. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets George wrote on 12/23/2006 4:36 PM: "Wayne Sallee" wrote in message nk.net... There is a difference between the "green brittle", and what we all call a brittle star. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets And that would be? Come on. Out with it, already. :-) George |
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