but I prefer not to feed things that they would normally never encouter in the wild
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9289305#post9289305 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by papagimp
Krill uh? That's an idea, seeing how I have a freezer full and never tought to try it. My bangaii's (in the tank with the urchin) don't particulary like krill so I keep it out of there. Thanks for the tip!
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9289281#post9289281 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by rustybucket145
hahahah, Yeah, seeing as how they would never encounter a glass box, brine shrimp, skimmers, pumps, Metal Halides, Flourescent lights, probably 90% of your other tank inhabitants....... I can see where you're coming from....
These are ALL things that would NEVER occur in the urchins native habitat, but they are all necessary to keep the urchin alive outside it's natural habitat. The seaweed that you purchase is most likely grown on a farm in Japan. Your urchin most likely came from Gulf waters. That said it would never encounter the type of algae you are feeding it in it's native waters.
The simple fact is that it won't hurt your tank. It will benefit your urchin. So unless you can actively and continuously supply them with EVERYTHING that they encounter in the wild (thousands of types of algae) you're gonna have to supplement them with things that aren't found in the wild. With little or no coraline in your tank your urchin is going to need some pretty 'beefy' food until your tank gets established or else he will starve. When he starves he will begin slowly dropping spines... he will do this until he is spineless, then he will sit in one place (b/c the spines are what moves him) and slowly finish starving to death and die.
genetically engineered pesticide filled super brocolli?