If you have a fork mount, which you most likely do, you will need a wedge for it, wedges are fairly expensive if you want a quality one. And with astrophotography at 2000mm focal length you defiantly don't want to skimp out on the mount. Astrophotography is more about your mount than anything, especially as focal length increases, above 1500mm is where it really gets tough as even a minor vibration such as the mirror slap on a camera can render your image soft or even a blurry mess.
If you have a equatorial mount don't worry about a wedge its not needed.
If you plan to to deep sky prime focus astrophotography (thats where you remove the eye piece and put a camera in its place) you will need a t-ring and adapter (usually pretty cheep), a guide scope or off axis guider (so you can keep your mount perfectly on track as even with motorized mount there is periodic error which you will need to compensate for other wise you end up with a blurry mess), and a focusing solution such as a knife edge focuser (you wont be able to focus through the view finder because it will be too dark, and attempting to do it by trial and error using the view screen after you snap a picture is very time consuming and very rarely accurate.
A focal reducer is also very useful as it will increase the field of view, lower the focal length and f/ratio usualy by about 40%.
So basicly:
Wedge $300-$400
Tring/adaptor $50
Guide scope $300-500 (or a off axis guide for about $200 but no where near as useful)
Knife edge/ronchi focuser $200-300
Focal Reducer $80-140
Prime focus astrophotography is one of those things where the money you put in is directly proportional to the image quality.
If you just want to take images of the planets (well Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn) with very little extra investment than you already have, you would only need the t-ring/adaptor and focusing solution. Your exposure time will be very short so you wont need to accurately compensate for the rotation of earth.
Also Piggyback astrophotography isn't too much extra investment, just need a wedge and a mounting bracket for your camera to sit on top. To focus just set the lens at infinity. This is probably the best way to start out actually, especially since you have a good selection of lens to do piggyback astrophotography, 16-35 for some nice wide field of the milkyway or the 100-400 for large nebula's, open clusters, and large galaxies. It is much much easier to learn the ins and outs of astrophotography at lower focal lengths than to dive right in to the very deep end at 2000mm.
Also be sure to check out the forums on http://www.cloudynights.com
for more info on astronomy and astrophotography. Tons of info there, and the community is very knowledgeable and will be able to assist you with your setup, finding targets, imaging, and most importantly post-processing.
Canon 400D & 40D - Sigma 10-20 F4-5.6 - Canon 17-55mm F2.8 IS - Canon 28-105mm F3.5-4.5 - Sigma 70-200mm F2.8 - Canon 50mm F1.8 - Canon 100mm F2.0 - Canon 400mm F5.6http://www.flickr.com/photos/marcarnault/