Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
That looks like it, I would try to remove it if you can.
It's vanished againCan't say what it is without seeing the other side.
Color form is rather important. All of those guys in that photo are aquilonastra. There are people who have had negative experience with them. Mostly they are claimed to eat zoas.Getting a top shot was not possible by the time I saw it.
But what I saw and I think the photo shows is the leg tips are split like the bottom right star?
but it only has 5 limbs not 6
As shown in that same bottom right image, the stars can have different numbers of legs. They reproduce fissiparously, meaning they split in two and both pieces grow into their own specimens. In this case, the star (an Aquilonastra sp. - commonly known as Asterina stars in the hobby, though Asterina is technically a different genus in the same family, Asterinidae) drop legs and those legs turn into new stars, growing new legs and dropping them later to form still more stars.Getting a top shot was not possible by the time I saw it.
But what I saw and I think the photo shows is the leg tips are split like the bottom right star?
but it only has 5 limbs not 6
So a fair bet I now have 2As shown in that same bottom right image, the stars can have different numbers of legs. They reproduce fissiparously, meaning they split in two and both pieces grow into their own specimens. In this case, the star (an Aquilonastra sp. - commonly known as Asterina stars in the hobby, though Asterina is technically a different genus in the same family, Asterinidae) drop legs and those legs turn into new stars, growing new legs and dropping them later to form still more stars.
As mentioned, a top view is needed to ID to the species level.
You most likely have several. I’ve heard for a lot of people that the stars are relatively shy during the day, but if they look after lights out, there are usually substantially larger numbers of them in the tank.So a fair bet I now have 2
Or a crab ate a leg?
I was up mid night with a torch. Didn't see any stars except outside.You most likely have several. I’ve heard for a lot of people that the stars are relatively shy during the day, but if they look after lights out, there are usually substantially larger numbers of them in the tank.

