I leave the power heads on. It seems to increase the feeding response. @Katrina71 has suggested multiple times.
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Try baby brine. My cleaner goes crazy for them. Dump the brine and watch the wrasse connect the dots rapidly!Our Hawaiian cleaner wrasse causes me to lose sleep at night. Pickiest little eater... It just started to get it to feed on a mixture of oysterfeast, phytofest, mysis, cyclopods, spiralina, benepets and crushed flakes and just for good measure I've seeded the tank with live rodifers and tigerpods. Today I finally noticed it eating the cyclopods and flakes and it's constantly pecking at the rocks and wall. The other fish and CuC love it, it's like a buffet of foods, we also just added a clam and the skimmer is going nuts to combat the bioload.
I actually agree with @Miller535, Slow Eatting fish, should kept with their own, for long term Survival.While this doesn't really answer your question, I think it best to put fish in a tank that have similar feeding aggression. Really timid fish just generally don't fare well with more aggressive eaters. With that said, it can be done, it just takes more work. For instance I have a 125 gallon tank full of very active eaters, then I have a court jester gogy who is very passive. The court Jester Goby tends to hang near his hidey hole on the right side of the tank, so I feed the food on the left side of the tank and all of the other fish go over there, then I quickly a little of the gobies preferred food while the rest of the gang it not looking. And this allows the goby to get his.