How Many Urchins Are Too Many Urchins?

vlangel

Seahorse whisperer
View Badges
Joined
Feb 5, 2014
Messages
5,526
Reaction score
5,489
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
No urchins for me. My tank is a high nutrient macro algae tank by design and can't have those little lawn mowers chomping down on my macros. The macro algae themself keep nuisance algae to a minimum. My tomini tang and orange spot blenny control the small amount of nuisance algae except bubble and that I periodically syphon out.
 

Macdaddynick1

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
May 20, 2014
Messages
1,790
Reaction score
2,299
Location
Reseda, California
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
pretty sure same urchin,just different colors ;)
Oh no. Holloween urchins are a lot more efficient., they are also much bigger. They eat a lot more algae, they eat long hair algae, long ulva, etc. I have both kinds and the difference is huge. The only problem with holloween urchins is that they pick up a bunch of frags all the time.
 
OP
OP
Hugh Mann

Hugh Mann

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Feb 12, 2020
Messages
1,998
Reaction score
1,986
Location
Merritt, BC
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
They eat bryopsis too? Please tell me they eat bryopsis.

I had no idea urchins would eat meats and stuff, I thought they were algae only. If that's the case, I think food certainly won't be an issue. I love urchins, I think they're super cool. And since I don't have frags for it to disturb, even better.

Maybe I'll 3d print some tiny hats.
 

Jon Fishman

Cleveland Ohio, buy/sell local!
View Badges
Joined
Feb 18, 2019
Messages
5,105
Reaction score
8,689
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have 3 (including a pencil) and I plan on about 4 more. I just need them all to be different though.

My pencil is pretty big...... so tell your friends

1AAB03E8-EE16-447C-A7C0-6EC43DB32BC4.jpeg
 

burningmime

Well-Known Member
View Badges
Joined
Jan 21, 2020
Messages
550
Reaction score
786
Location
Montana
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I mean, it probably depends on how many dead urchins you want. You could theoretically add enough urchins to the tank so that it was all urchin and no water. But then they'd all be dead...amd you'd have to sell all the uni.

I'd add 2 more, wait until 4 months post move to 230, and evaluate then.

This got me curious. Let's assume that the average urchin is roughly 1.5in across when compressed and perfectly spherical. A gallon is 231 in³, therefore a 55 gallon tank is 12705 in³. According to the recently-proven Kepler Conjecture, the densest possible packing of spheres in 3-space is π/(3√2) roughly 74.05%, which means we have about 855 in³ worth of space to fill with urchins. That lets us provide space for roughly 1774 urchins.

However, urchins are not uniformly sized, meaning we have a Random Close Pack. That's rather unfortunate, since there will be more wasted space (perhaps taken up by boring stuff like rock/fish/coral) in between our urchins. We also have the sides/bottom of the tank to worry about. On the other hand, urchins are soft/compressible, not perfectly spherical, and some of their spines can overlap, all of which lets us fit a few more.

I'd say it would be safe to start with around 1500 urchins, which leaves some comfortable room to fill in the gaps with water. When you upgrade to your roomy 230 gallon, you can get 5000 more.
 
Last edited:

OldRed1

Well-Known Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 4, 2022
Messages
960
Reaction score
1,419
Location
New York
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
This got me curious. Let's assume that the average urchin is roughly 1.5in across when compressed and perfectly spherical. A gallon is 231 in³, therefore a 55 gallon tank is 12705 in³. According to the recently-proven Kepler Conjecture, the densest possible packing of spheres in 3-space is π/(3√2) roughly 74.05%, which means we have about 855 in³ worth of space to fill with urchins. That lets us provide space for roughly 1774 urchins.

However, urchins are not uniformly sized, meaning we have a Random Close Pack. That's rather unfortunate, since there will be more wasted space (perhaps taken up by boring stuff like rock/fish/coral) in between our urchins. We also have the sides/bottom of the tank to worry about. On the other hand, urchins are soft/compressible, not perfectly spherical, and some of their spines can overlap, all of which lets us fit a few more.

I'd say it would be safe to start with around 1500 urchins, which leaves some comfortable room to fill in the gaps with water. When you upgrade to your roomy 230 gallon, you can get 5000 more.
I love that my Google search brought me to this comment. Thank you for the laugh this morning!
 

High pressure shells: Do you look for signs of stress in the invertebrates in your reef tank?

  • I regularly look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 40 32.5%
  • I occasionally look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 28 22.8%
  • I rarely look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 24 19.5%
  • I never look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 31 25.2%
  • Other.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

New Posts

Back
Top