saltwater-girl
Active member
Having a new tank setup and being a newbie to the saltwater hobby ... I purchased a beautiful red/white sticky sea urchin (which I believe is in the tuxedo urchin family or some such family) for my tank. Little did I know that this fellow would struggle from the time I placed him into his new home.
The first 15 minutes in the tank found him totally tangled up in a fake plant I had in the tank for my clownfish. I quickly extricated him from the various fronds and removed the plant from the tank. The next thing to get stuck to him was a small algae plant that I had also purchased for the tank (a halimedia plant)...the urchin moved around the tank with the plant attached to his back for a few days then I felt like I should probably remove that from him also so I did and got rid of that plant.
The next think I noticed was that the urchin's soft spines where disappearing and his hard spines were turning orange in some locations near the body. Not being real sure what was happening I did some internet research and the word was basically that if the urchin was losing spines he probably would not make it but possibly he was malnourished. As my tank is a new setup I felt this was indeed a possiblity. The articles suggested feeding the urchin seaweed sheets which I immediately did. I fed him a 3x3 sheet two days ago and another yesterday.
As of today the urchin is still moving around the tank but he does not look much better in regard to appearance (spines) although I do not believe he has lost more.
So my questions are as follows:
1) does anyone have any experience with sea urchins and if so, do you have experience with the symptoms I have reported
2) what suggestions or changes can I make to help
3) if feeding the seaweed is a good thing, how often should I feed it and how much
I can probably get a picture of my guy tomorrow if you need one...water parameters are pretty normal with nitrates being a little up at 10ppm, ph is 8.2, temp is 76, ammonia is 0, nitrites are 0
Oh, I also read that urchins like warmer water (around 80 degrees) so maybe our water is too cold for him but how do you balance fish and urchins if that is true? Isn't 80 degrees a bit warm for fish?
Thanks for your help and assistance :?:
The first 15 minutes in the tank found him totally tangled up in a fake plant I had in the tank for my clownfish. I quickly extricated him from the various fronds and removed the plant from the tank. The next thing to get stuck to him was a small algae plant that I had also purchased for the tank (a halimedia plant)...the urchin moved around the tank with the plant attached to his back for a few days then I felt like I should probably remove that from him also so I did and got rid of that plant.
The next think I noticed was that the urchin's soft spines where disappearing and his hard spines were turning orange in some locations near the body. Not being real sure what was happening I did some internet research and the word was basically that if the urchin was losing spines he probably would not make it but possibly he was malnourished. As my tank is a new setup I felt this was indeed a possiblity. The articles suggested feeding the urchin seaweed sheets which I immediately did. I fed him a 3x3 sheet two days ago and another yesterday.
As of today the urchin is still moving around the tank but he does not look much better in regard to appearance (spines) although I do not believe he has lost more.
So my questions are as follows:
1) does anyone have any experience with sea urchins and if so, do you have experience with the symptoms I have reported
2) what suggestions or changes can I make to help
3) if feeding the seaweed is a good thing, how often should I feed it and how much
I can probably get a picture of my guy tomorrow if you need one...water parameters are pretty normal with nitrates being a little up at 10ppm, ph is 8.2, temp is 76, ammonia is 0, nitrites are 0
Oh, I also read that urchins like warmer water (around 80 degrees) so maybe our water is too cold for him but how do you balance fish and urchins if that is true? Isn't 80 degrees a bit warm for fish?
Thanks for your help and assistance :?: