ReefDen

Species database

Every species, with the details that actually matter.

Tank size, care level, water parameters, temperament, reef-compatibility, and feeding — all in one place. Filter to find the right species for your tank.

19 species found

Ancylocaris brevicarpalis
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Peacock-tail Anemone Shrimp

Family Palaemonidae

Peacock-tail anemone shrimp lives commensally inside large host anemones, picking through tentacles. Peaceful and reef-safe, but only thrives when there's a healthy host in the tank. Skip if you don't already keep anemones.

Min tank: 10 gal

Calcinus elegans
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Electric Blue Hermit Crab

Family Diogenidae

Electric blue hermit crab — vivid cobalt legs on a small reef-safe scavenger. Eats algae and leftover food. Will fight over shells with other hermits and occasionally murder snails for theirs, so keep spare shells available.

Min tank: 10 gal

Cerithium nodulosum
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Giant Nodulose Creeper

Family Cerithiidae

Large cerith snail and one of the most underrated cleanup-crew members — it works the sand bed, the glass, and rockwork equally, eating detritus and film algae. Stack a few in mid-sized reefs and forget about them.

Min tank: 10 gal

Clibanarius tricolor
invertCare 1/5

Blue Leg Hermit

Family Diogenidae

Small, useful cleanup crew. Munches algae and leftover food. Will occasionally murder snails for shells — keep extras around.

Min tank: 5 gal

Conomurex luhuanus
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Strawberry Conch

Family Strombidae

Strawberry conch — a peaceful, slow-moving sand-sifter that keeps the top inch of substrate aerated and free of nuisance algae. Reef-safe and works well alongside cleanup crew snails. Needs an actual sand bed (not bare-bottom).

Min tank: 20 gal

Echinometra mathaei
invertCare 2/5

Indo-Pacific Rock-boring Urchin

Family Echinometridae

Indo-Pacific rock-boring urchin — solid algae grazer that will mow down nuisance algae and coralline alike. Watch placement: it will rearrange small frags and shells. The spines are sharp; gloves recommended for tank work.

Min tank: 30 gal

Entacmaea quadricolor
invertCare 3/5

Bubble-tip Anemone

Family Actiniidae

Bubble-tip anemone — the most reef-safe host anemone and the one most likely to be accepted by Amphiprion clownfish in captivity. Splits readily under good conditions. Like all anemones, it wanders; screen pump intakes.

Min tank: 50 gal

Fromia indica
invertCare 3/5Reef-safe

Indian Sea Star

Family Goniasteridae

Indian sea star — vivid red, slow-moving, and pretty. Like most sea stars, it's a slow declining specialist that depends on biofilm and detritus from a mature sand bed. Only attempt in established systems (1+ year old).

Min tank: 50 gal

Linckia laevigata
invertCare 3/5Reef-safe

Blue Linckia

Family Ophidiasteridae

The blue Linckia is one of the most photogenic inverts in the hobby and one of the hardest to keep. Most specimens slowly starve over 6–12 months due to undetected nutritional deficiencies. Don't buy unless you can verify long-term sourcing.

Min tank: 75 gal

Lysmata amboinensis
invertCare 2/5Reef-safe

Skunk Cleaner Shrimp

Family Hippolytidae

Reef-safe, charismatic, and actively cleans parasites off your fish. One of the most rewarding inverts in the hobby.

Min tank: 20 gal

Mithraculus sculptus
invertCare 1/5

Green Clinging Crab

Family Mithracidae

Emerald crab — the hobby's go-to solution for bubble algae (Valonia) outbreaks. Reef-safe with caution: well-fed individuals leave fish and corals alone, but underfed ones will sample anything. Keep 1 per ~30 gallons.

Min tank: 20 gal

Phrontis vibex
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Bruised Nassa

Family Nassariidae

Nassarius snail — buries in the sand and emerges at feeding time like a periscope. Excellent at cleaning up leftover meaty food before it fouls. Reef-safe and one of the most useful cleanup crew members per dollar.

Min tank: 10 gal

Radianthus crispa
invertCare 3/5

Sebae Anemone

Family Stichodactylidae

The sebae anemone, also known as leathery sea anemone, long tentacle anemone, or purple tip anemone, is a species of sea anemone in the family Stichodactylidae and native to the Indo-Pacific.

Min tank: 50 gal

Sabellastarte spectabilis
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Indian Feather Duster Worm

Family Sabellidae

Indian feather duster — graceful crown of feathery radioles that retract instantly when startled. Filter-feeds on phytoplankton and fine particulate food. Best in mature systems where the tank itself produces enough food.

Min tank: 20 gal

Saron marmoratus
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Marbled Shrimp

Family Hippolytidae

Marbled shrimp — nocturnal, camouflaged, and visually striking when you catch one out under blue lights. Reef-safe and peaceful; an unusual alternative to the standard cleaner shrimp lineup for a more naturalistic display.

Min tank: 20 gal

Stichodactyla haddoni
invertCare 3/5

Haddon's Anemone

Family Stichodactylidae

Stichodactyla haddoni, commonly known as the sea mushroom or Haddon's sea anemone, is a species of sea anemone belonging to the family Stichodactylidae.

Min tank: 50 gal

Thor amboinensis
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Squat Anemone Shrimp

Family Thoridae

Sexy shrimp — tiny, photogenic, and constantly wiggling its abdomen as if dancing. Lives in groups around anemones or large corals. Peaceful, reef-safe, and beginner-friendly. Best kept in groups of 3+.

Min tank: 10 gal

Trapezia rufopunctata
invertCare 1/5Reef-safe

Rust-spotted Guard Crab

Family Trapeziidae

Guard crab — lives commensally inside branching corals (Pocillopora, Acropora) and defends its host from coral predators. A natural pairing for SPS-focused tanks, where its presence actively protects the coral.

Min tank: 10 gal

Tripneustes gratilla
invertCare 1/5

Collector Urchin

Family Toxopneustidae

Collector urchin — covers itself in shells, rubble, and frags it picks up off the substrate (yes, including the ones you just glued down). Excellent algae grazer for larger reefs where its decorating habit is charming, not infuriating.

Min tank: 30 gal