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Old 25-02-2003, 10:04 AM
Christopher
 
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Default Amano and Ghost Shrimp

what sort of tank should I breed them in? a 10 gallon with java moss sound
good? what sort of lighting would I need to put over it then? what sort of
filtration? what sort of temp? If the babies are so small wouldn't I vacuum
them out when I do a water change? What should I feed them...and last of
all the only store here that I know of that sells ghost shrimp sells ones
that after awhile get green little sacs under their abdomens...I assume
those are eggs? Does this mean they are freshwater?


"LeighMo" wrote in message
...
you can try it out though, around here ghost shrimp go for $.20 each so

$2
isn't really that big of an investment...


Heck, buy five or six and wait awhlie. You'll soon have more than you

know
what to do with.

that said I can't really imagine a ghost shrimp being predatory except

for
perhaps the smallest of fry possible...


They can kill livebearer fry. A fish as large as a neon tetra will

probably be
safe...if it's healthy. And be careful, sometimes macrobrachium shrimp

get
mixed in with ghost shrimp. They look similar, but have bigger claws, and

are
much more predatory.

also, has anyone had success breeding ghost shrimp?


Try to keep them from breeding. They're worse than guppies. I bought

five a
couple of years ago, and in a few months, I could've opened my own bait

shop.

There are only a couple of "tricks." One is that both brackish and

freshwater
shrimp are sold as ghost shrimp. For breeding, you want the freshwater

kind.
Freshwater ghost shrimp carry their babies until they are miniature copies

of
their parents, so you don't have to deal with weird larval stages or

anything.
Unfortunately, it's not easy to tell freshwater from brackish ghost

shrimp, so
you may be stuck with trial and error. (I have heard that if you see

females
with eggs, they are likely freshwater, but I don't know how true that is.)

The second trick is iodine. Ghost shrimp tend to turn white and die after

a
few weeks unless you put a little iodine in the water. Get the kind sold

as a
supplement for marine tanks, and put in one drop with each water change.

Other than that, raising ghosties couldn't be easier. Put some java moss

in
the tank, maybe, for the babies to hide in. And leave the detritus in the
tank; don't vaccum it out. Feed them ordinary flake fish food, and you'll

soon
be up to your neck in shrimp.


Leigh

http://www.fortunecity.com/lavender/halloween/881/



 
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