wow wood, ur tanks really comin to life now, love the crab, just think pretty soon you'll havesome fish in there!!
Welcome to the world of discovery. Feather dusters are hard to keep because many tankmates like to pester them. It seems your sally is that tankmate for you. You can try moving the feather away from the rocks and see if it leaves it alone. I have never had luck myself with feathers just because there is always something in my tank pecking at them.
That is a really nice one though.. never seen a yellow one, just the normal brown and purple ones.
wow wood, ur tanks really comin to life now, love the crab, just think pretty soon you'll havesome fish in there!!
African Feather duster, 2 real cerith snails and a Boxer crab. The thing is our LFS guy said that the feather duster would be fine in our tank with what we had so far. Well our Sally light foot is eating the covering of the worm.
Dose anyone know what kind of start this is. It just turned up on our over flow box and was wondering if it is reef safe? I know allot of these type stars are and I was wondering if I should take it out?
Looks like a yellow coco worm. Nice one, don't see those often around here. Feather dusters are incredibly easy to care for and make wonderful beginner inverts. I'm not surprised your sally light food is going after it though, they don't have a good reputation for being reef safe or even reef safe-ish in my opinion. Now that you've seen it on the feather I'd probably get rid of one or the other.
It is an asterina starfish. I disagree with saying they are reef safe in general. Some are, some aren't. If you see them on your glass or rocks they are probably one of the reef safe ones. However if you see them on your zoas, sps, etc. they probably aren't. I've found some of the bad ones in my own tank and remove them when I see them. I leave the ones on the glass or in the overflow alone. Oh, and don't be suprised if you see white areas where they eat the coraline.![]()