Feeding HARLEQUIN shrimp HELP

Dr RBG

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I have a pair of harlequin shrimp which did a great job of eliminating a ton of asterina stars. I am looking for a way to feed them as I do not think they eat anything but stars. I would hate to lose them.

I tried a leg of a chocolate chip star but the rest of it died. Can you buy asterina stars?
thanks

Harlequin Shrimp - Asterina Starfish Eating.jpg
 
Linkia stars are what they love. Get a bunch and cut the legs off some and place in a refugium and add as they grow out and are needed. You need to become a propagator of Linkia stars to keep the Harlequins alive and they are voracious eaters.
 
Linkia stars are what they love. Get a bunch and cut the legs off some and place in a refugium and add as they grow out and are needed. You need to become a propagator of Linkia stars to keep the Harlequins alive and they are voracious eaters.

I've done this with chocolate chip starfish. Most seems to be "okay" with this, but every once in a while, one will start dieing and that seems to start a chain reaction, killing the others. You'll need to give them around 6 weeks to regrow their legs, so you'll likely need to buy around 10-12 of these to try and do it "sustainably".

I know people will recommend cutting the legs off and freezing them, but these seems to hold less nutritional value than fresh, as the harlequin shrimps will be searching for food quicker.
 
I've done this with chocolate chip starfish. Most seems to be "okay" with this, but every once in a while, one will start dieing and that seems to start a chain reaction, killing the others. You'll need to give them around 6 weeks to regrow their legs, so you'll likely need to buy around 10-12 of these to try and do it "sustainably".

I know people will recommend cutting the legs off and freezing them, but these seems to hold less nutritional value than fresh, as the harlequin shrimps will be searching for food quicker.
I have never had a Linkia cause a chain reaction death of other Linkia stars. I never recommend freezing, just propagating. Linkia are relatively speedy growers and are easier for the shrimp to handle. Either route you go, this is a time and effort commitment on your part. Those shrimp are far too cool to not care for them properly.
 
I have never had a Linkia cause a chain reaction death of other Linkia stars. I never recommend freezing, just propagating. Linkia are relatively speedy growers and are easier for the shrimp to handle.

Good to know! We will keep that in mind when we get a pair.
 
I just but 1 chocolate star fish every 2 weeks and put it in the tank. Usually take a week for my harlequin to eat it the whole thing. Then he’s good for a week.
 
I just but 1 chocolate star fish every 2 weeks and put it in the tank. Usually take a week for my harlequin to eat it the whole thing. Then he’s good for a week.

I had a pair in my old tank for over 2.5 years and I did the exact same thing. They always took the star back into their hiding spot and they’d come out a few days later once it was gone.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

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