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#1
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Acording to the Livequaria.com description, Astropecten polycanthus
do not have suction cups so they cannot climb glass/rocks. I am not sure if Liveaquaria is right or wrong, but my star has suction cups and does climb glass. Maybe I have something different, not Astropecten polycanthus? I am currently trying to identify mine because since I put it into the tank the substrate is dead-clean. No benthic animals whatsoever. And before putting it in I have quite a live sand with a lot of miniature brittle stars, copepods and other live forms. Now it is dead-dead. I tried to feed my star recently to prevent it from eating critters form the bottom of the tank but it just ignores completely chunk of shrimp meat put underneath it and just walks away. Maybe not hungry anymore? Or maybe not guily of this carnivore job? If you can - please help me identify - you will find pictures he www.polbox.com/p/pszemol/english.html - click on Sand Sifting Star. If you have good marine invertebrate atlas, please check if Astropecten polycanthus has suction cups or not... and what does it eat for real... Thanks! |
#2
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Mine looks just like yours and it does climb up the glass which I didn't
think it would do either. Once I saw it going over the live rock as well but usually it is on the sand or on the glass. I'm looking forward to the answers of your questions as well. One thing that is pretty neat is how fast it can bury itself. "Pszemol" wrote in message ... Acording to the Livequaria.com description, Astropecten polycanthus do not have suction cups so they cannot climb glass/rocks. I am not sure if Liveaquaria is right or wrong, but my star has suction cups and does climb glass. Maybe I have something different, not Astropecten polycanthus? I am currently trying to identify mine because since I put it into the tank the substrate is dead-clean. No benthic animals whatsoever. And before putting it in I have quite a live sand with a lot of miniature brittle stars, copepods and other live forms. Now it is dead-dead. I tried to feed my star recently to prevent it from eating critters form the bottom of the tank but it just ignores completely chunk of shrimp meat put underneath it and just walks away. Maybe not hungry anymore? Or maybe not guily of this carnivore job? If you can - please help me identify - you will find pictures he www.polbox.com/p/pszemol/english.html - click on Sand Sifting Star. If you have good marine invertebrate atlas, please check if Astropecten polycanthus has suction cups or not... and what does it eat for real... Thanks! |
#3
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This is from Baensch's Marine Atlas, Vol. 3, p. 942. It describes
Astropecten phragmorus, which is apparently very similar to A. polyacanthus. I've included all of the information that they provide (except for availability and difficulty). Hope this helps. :-) Habitat: Indo-Pacific; from the Red Sea to the Philippines. It lives at depths of 5-25 m. Sexual Differences: None Social Behaviour/Association: This solitary animal usually remains buried in the substrate during the day, but at twilight it emerges and freely roams through the night searching for food on coralline sands and close to reefs. Keep singly; it cohabits well with fishes that do not sleep on the bottom. Maintenance: An aquarium with a 5-10 cm layer of sand where it [likes] to burrow. Rock and coral edifications do not influence maintenance. Light Requirement: Sunlight zone (30,000 to 50,000 lux) Breeding/Reproduction: Like other Astropecten Feeding: Carnivore; inhabitants of the upper sand layer are "sniffed out", dug up, and then stuffed into the elastic stomach. The small bivalves it consumes with predilection can be offered in captivity. Specialties: Characteristically, this sea star is beige, brown, to pink and often has dark irregular spots and several rows of large teeth on the edges of the arms. Near the base of the arms, there is a light to dark brown or reddish line. Astropecten polyacanthus is extremely similar, but its erect rows of spines are internally noncontinuous. Temperatu 22dC - 27dC Diameter: 15cm Tank Length: from 50cm Water Movement: moderate Water Region: bottom In article , says... Acording to the Livequaria.com description, Astropecten polycanthus do not have suction cups so they cannot climb glass/rocks. I am not sure if Liveaquaria is right or wrong, but my star has suction cups and does climb glass. Maybe I have something different, not Astropecten polycanthus? I am currently trying to identify mine because since I put it into the tank the substrate is dead-clean. No benthic animals whatsoever. And before putting it in I have quite a live sand with a lot of miniature brittle stars, copepods and other live forms. Now it is dead-dead. I tried to feed my star recently to prevent it from eating critters form the bottom of the tank but it just ignores completely chunk of shrimp meat put underneath it and just walks away. Maybe not hungry anymore? Or maybe not guily of this carnivore job? If you can - please help me identify - you will find pictures he www.polbox.com/p/pszemol/english.html - click on Sand Sifting Star. If you have good marine invertebrate atlas, please check if Astropecten polycanthus has suction cups or not... and what does it eat for real... Thanks! -- 7y FW -- 33g & 55g 100 gallon reef-ready air tank. (Converting to reef) |
#4
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Thanks. So it really eat everything from my bottom :-(
I am so sad - the bio-balance in my reef is broken now. I have no critters in my sand. There is nobody to eat detritus and my nitrates level are climbing suprisingli fast :-( Star is going back to the store and I am looking now for ways to re-seed my substrate - any good ideas? "Marco Qualizza" wrote in message ... This is from Baensch's Marine Atlas, Vol. 3, p. 942. It describes Astropecten phragmorus, which is apparently very similar to A. polyacanthus. I've included all of the information that they provide (except for availability and difficulty). Hope this helps. :-) Habitat: Indo-Pacific; from the Red Sea to the Philippines. It lives at depths of 5-25 m. Sexual Differences: None Social Behaviour/Association: This solitary animal usually remains buried in the substrate during the day, but at twilight it emerges and freely roams through the night searching for food on coralline sands and close to reefs. Keep singly; it cohabits well with fishes that do not sleep on the bottom. Maintenance: An aquarium with a 5-10 cm layer of sand where it [likes] to burrow. Rock and coral edifications do not influence maintenance. Light Requirement: Sunlight zone (30,000 to 50,000 lux) Breeding/Reproduction: Like other Astropecten Feeding: Carnivore; inhabitants of the upper sand layer are "sniffed out", dug up, and then stuffed into the elastic stomach. The small bivalves it consumes with predilection can be offered in captivity. Specialties: Characteristically, this sea star is beige, brown, to pink and often has dark irregular spots and several rows of large teeth on the edges of the arms. Near the base of the arms, there is a light to dark brown or reddish line. Astropecten polyacanthus is extremely similar, but its erect rows of spines are internally noncontinuous. Temperatu 22dC - 27dC Diameter: 15cm Tank Length: from 50cm Water Movement: moderate Water Region: bottom In article , says... Acording to the Livequaria.com description, Astropecten polycanthus do not have suction cups so they cannot climb glass/rocks. I am not sure if Liveaquaria is right or wrong, but my star has suction cups and does climb glass. Maybe I have something different, not Astropecten polycanthus? I am currently trying to identify mine because since I put it into the tank the substrate is dead-clean. No benthic animals whatsoever. And before putting it in I have quite a live sand with a lot of miniature brittle stars, copepods and other live forms. Now it is dead-dead. I tried to feed my star recently to prevent it from eating critters form the bottom of the tank but it just ignores completely chunk of shrimp meat put underneath it and just walks away. Maybe not hungry anymore? Or maybe not guily of this carnivore job? If you can - please help me identify - you will find pictures he www.polbox.com/p/pszemol/english.html - click on Sand Sifting Star. If you have good marine invertebrate atlas, please check if Astropecten polycanthus has suction cups or not... and what does it eat for real... Thanks! -- 7y FW -- 33g & 55g 100 gallon reef-ready air tank. (Converting to reef) |
#5
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![]() "Marco Qualizza" wrote in message ... In article , says... Star is going back to the store and I am looking now for ways to re-seed my substrate - any good ideas? Reseeding your DSB shouldn't be a problem (LS from LFS, LR will seed, and I believe some LFSs sell "clean-up crew" packages ?) ... I think that what you really need is to find a way to control your nitrates until you DSB can handle the load again... The only thing that comes to mind for me is water changes... Yeap.... Goto your LFS and buy a LR and check to see if there are BioDiverse. This will quickly start your seeding of your LS and LR. This is the only fastest way of reseeding that I can think of. Or ask your LFS or Reef buddy to swap LS or LR with you. CapFusion,... |
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