Yellow Sea Cucumber

Typically the more brightly colored filter feeder types of cukes are also of the more noxious kind. Those particular ones stay small and in a large say 180g reef would probably do okay. I think the biggest issue would be keeping it out of powerheads. You can see that they do like phytoplankton so for better health it may be good idea to also provide it with phyto.
 
I might give one a try, they are beautiful. I like the pink ones with the yellow tenticles......I'm going to look for one of those
 
Don't have link right now, but you can search wetwebmedia.com for this Latin name, it was recommended for refugium.

Beware only, that in LFS you can mistake for it the gold sand-sifting cucumber, as I did, it was on the top of the tank, yellow, small and spiky. Had make an accommodations - had bare-bottom tanks only :)
 
yes i have a BB tank.....don't want the sandsifter one.....I think the pink one is a filter feeder and is on the glass most of the time......correct me if I'm wrong........
 
The "pink one" is a pretty broad reference, there are alot of cucumbers. Usually a determination can be made regarding how/what it feeds on by looking at mouthparts. The sand sifters have relatively short flower looking things, and the filter feeders have longer branching possibly even feathery type things.
 
I've never had them, but I've known several reefers that have. They're good for the tank and often multiply by division. Our local reef store likes them and usually keeps them in stock. Just keep them away from powerheads.
 
Protect intakes of poweheard and the heaters, if they are in tank (plastic grid-like heater guards). May be cucumbers just like heat?
yellowheater1.jpg

yellowheater2.jpg

yellowheater3.jpg

yellowheater4.jpg



I absolutely love pink filter feeding Pentacta ancepts:
Cucumber20Jul06.jpg

ChristmasTreeAugHex.jpg

Pentacta_ancepsAug9.jpg

and the way it "licks fingers":
CukeSept26.jpg
 
Nice tank and pics dendro, I have yellow just like yours, but that pink one is spectacular. Not sure if I may have missed it earlier. Do you supplement feeding for the pink one?
 
WOW, thats what I need. I would like to get both of them.....where can I get the pink one ? Would fairy wrasses bother them ?
 
More from the life of cucumbers:

This is how they may look at the store:
goldencukeasinstoreAug7a.jpg

PentactaclosedOct4.jpg

PentactaclosedAug26.jpg


Closeups:
cukesbothAug10.jpg

goldencukeAug10.jpg

Golden one is usually wandering in a new tank.
Here it is at work:
goldenatworkAug25.jpg


They are quite colorful, especially with other colorful things:
goldencukealgaeSept21.jpg

goldencukealgaeOci26.jpg

Ochtodes algae will look nice with this cuke:
OchtodesDec1.jpg

Will continue.
 
Life of cucumber continue:
Back side of the pink and green filter-feeding cucumber Pentacta anceps:
PentactabackAug9.jpg


Behavior in a new tank - moving into position, facing flow:
PentactamovingOct3a.jpg

PentactamovingOct3.jpg

PentactamovingOct5.jpg

cukebothOct18.jpg


This new tank was with higher light (7w/gal PC, 12" depth), golden SS cuke was hiding most of the time, when the lights are on:
goldenhidingNov3.jpg

goldenwmushroomOct26.jpg

In previous tank, 4-5W/gal, same depth, it was at open more frequently.

End of pictorial.

Where to get them:
LFS, summer time. Some stores favor invertebrates - check around. Cost - CND$20-35. Golden is more common, could be even of the size 1/2" diameter, 1.5" long. Eventually grows may be 6-7" long, could be more.

I asked at forums, how to distinguish golden SS cucumber and yellow spiky FF cucumber (topic of the thread) - they said that the last has very long spikes and is really small, more bright yellow than golden.

Feeding of the pink FF one:
graveyardworm, I remember you from Dendronephtya study group, you know how to feed filter feeders. Any food you have for them should be good.

Locally most of the recommended food sources were unavailable (first time seen Oyster eggs for sale only today, and CND$64 for a small jar, not the smallest, seems for me to be too much). I used for a feeding all tank (no target feeding) the second water after thawing half of cube of mysis and marine cousine. First thawed water was discarded, then added some saltwater and use this for a feeding. 2-3 times daily. And a lot of dried Cyclop-eeze. Tried at beginning Kent's Micro-Vert, Chroma-Plex and Zoo-Plex - was not impressed, as if I added nothing at all.

The first tank was 5-6g hexagon, housing these cucumbers and the big Christmas three rock, which requires the similar feeding in a large quantities.
Because golden SS cucumber was mistaken for FF one, I had no place for it in my bare-bottom tanks, and in shallow sand bed were not enough food for it. Started add the slow sinking pellets for a bottom feeders - much better, 1-2 pellets daily.

Then united 2 tanks into 20g long tank with enough sand for SS cuke.
Feeding in this tank was drastically reduced, because mandarin and scooter received a lot of frozen and pellet food, more than enough particles in the water column - even for 2 babies Tridacna maxima. For a few weeks added ESV spray-dried phytoplankton, but the recommended dose was too much, not eaten and polluted water of this skimmerless tank.

I have them no more: bought colorful nudibranches Chromodoris magnifica and Chromodoris quadricolor, then all sponges I could find for their feeding. The blue one died, then next day one of the nudibranches, then tank crashed (details are here), a lot of inhabitants died, cucumbers too, RIP.
Total time frame - beginning of August to the end of November. FF Christmas tree rock was acquired earlier and is well even now.
What was good - neither of them eviscerated, so they are safe.

Note on tanks for filter feeders: hexagon was very good, cube should be too - flow goes round, top to bottom.
Seems, it's all.

I didn't have wrasse there, chromises, mandarin and scooter only. No problem with these.

Here are links to Robert Toonen's articles about sea cucumbers:
Sea cucumbers - Part I: The Medusa Worms
Sea Cucumbers - Part II: Sand-stirrers.
Sea Cucumbers - Part III: Sea Apples.
 
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