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Scientific name
Linckia multifora
Family
Ophidiasteridae
Adult size
4-8 inches
Min tank size
75 gallons (mature, established tank only)
Temperature
74-82°F
Salinity
1.024-1.026
Temperament
Peaceful
Difficulty
Advanced (sensitive to acclimation)
Lifespan
5-10 years in captivity

About the Red Linckia Starfish

Red Linckia starfish are the red-orange cousin of the popular blue Linckia - same care requirements, different coloration. Demands long-established (12+ month) reef tanks with abundant biofilm and detritus. Sensitive to shipping and acclimation - drip acclimate over 4+ hours and never expose to air. Beautiful when stable but high mortality in newer systems.

Native range: Indo-Pacific. Most US trade specimens come through marine wholesale suppliers in Indonesia, the Philippines, Hawaii, and the Caribbean. Wild collection remains the primary sourcing method for the majority of marine inverts - few are captive-bred at commercial scale. Quality of acclimation at the wholesale/retail stage is the biggest single predictor of long-term survival in home aquaria.

Tank setup and parameters

Tank size: 75 gallons (mature, established tank only). Parameters: temperature 74-82°F, salinity 1.024-1.026, plus the standard reef tank requirements - stable calcium 420-440 ppm, alkalinity 8-10 dKH, magnesium 1300-1400 ppm, nitrate under 25 ppm, phosphate under 0.05 ppm. The species requires conditions consistent with a healthy reef tank rather than nutrient-stripped sterile water - well-established systems with diverse microfauna and biofilm typically support these inverts better than newly-cycled tanks.

Lighting: depends on species. Photosynthetic inverts (clams, anemone-symbiotic species) require high-PAR reef LED lighting. Filter-feeders (worms, scallops) prefer moderate lighting and benefit from particulate-rich water. Flow: moderate, indirect flow works for most inverts - direct high-velocity flow stresses or damages soft-bodied species.

Acclimation: drip acclimate over 2-4 hours for hardy species, 4-8 hours for sensitive species (Linckia stars, sea hares, demanding nudibranchs). Never expose inverts to air during transfer - capture in a bowl underwater and transfer wet.

Diet and feeding

Red Linckia Starfish diet: Biofilm, detritus, microalgae. Feeding strategy depends on dietary type. Algae eaters require established tanks with biofilm and microalgae growth - new tanks lack the algal base they need. Carnivore inverts (starfish, some snails) need targeted meaty feedings 2-3x weekly. Filter feeders (clams, worms, scallops) need phytoplankton in the water column. Photosynthetic species need adequate lighting plus supplemental amino acid or coral food dosing.

Compatible tank mates

Safe: Peaceful reef community in established systems.

Avoid: Stars-eaters (Harlequin shrimp, some triggers), new uncycled tanks.

Breeding

Asexual fission possible in healthy specimens.

Common problems and solutions

Shipping mortality; starvation in nutrient-stripped systems; salinity sensitivity.

Keeper note: Mature reef tank only. New tanks lack the biofilm and microfauna Linckia needs to survive. Drip acclimate 4-8 hours. Never lift the star into air during transfer.

Frequently asked questions

How big does the red Linckia get?

4-8 inches arm-tip to arm-tip.

Are red Linckia reef safe?

Yes - peaceful detritivore that ignores corals and most inverts.

How long should I acclimate a Linckia starfish?

Minimum 4 hours via slow drip. 6-8 hours is safer. Never expose to air during transfer.

Why do Linckia starfish often die?

Shipping stress + acclimation failure + nutrient-stripped tanks. Mature established systems with abundant biofilm provide the best chance of success.

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