<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13599681#post13599681 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Tennyson
I think it is possible, but unlikely.
I think if they are starving and are desperate for food they MAY eat one. I think
From what I've read, you're dead on. In a lot of cases, if you want to train your shrimp onto other food sources, it requires something akin to starving them and even then, them taking the alternate source is not a given.
When it comes to a spike in the tank from the star dying, I can't speak to issues with the spike. My shrimp eats the full star, which means that he does do fatal damage to its oral disc, but I have yet to see any problems arise from. I don't even get iffy PE on some of my more delicate corals.
As far as my single male, he eats Sand-sifters. He can polish off a tiny one in well under a week, but takes more like 2-3 full weeks on an "average" sized star. He will usually eat the entire star and never leave any of it. He's in my 34 gallon, which is a mixed reef with peaceful fish and no even slightly questionable fish when it comes to shrimp safety. I will say though, he doesn't completely care for angels or other fish that show similar grazing behavior as his lair seems to be a great place for them to pass through.
Here are a few pics.
I do have a question about my star's health this time around, though. Previously, I had never seen even a pod check out the shrimp's food. Tonight, even before lights-out, I saw one of the 4"-6" bristleworms in my tank with its head up under some of the flesh on the star's oral disc. It's a brand new star and only one leg has been consumed so far, at its usual length down to the base on the oral disc. Is the star dead and should I try to remove it?