Shrimp Tank - Aquariums - My 5.5 Gallon Blue shrimp tank. So many hiding places to hide, I rarely get to see more than three ��


My 5.5 Gallon Blue shrimp tank. So many hiding places to hide, I rarely get to see more than three ��

Posted: 07 May 2019 01:18 PM PDT

Crypt spiralis tiger �� super excited with its growth

Posted: 07 May 2019 05:13 PM PDT

My Blue Greens are doing great and we have 2 berried mamas.

Posted: 07 May 2019 10:07 AM PDT

My first batch of baby shrimp! (Macro lens)

Posted: 07 May 2019 08:24 PM PDT

Her pattern is so interesting. Glad she's berried, would love to pass those cute genes to the next gen :) (Taiwan bee hybrid, looks like regular crystal black but with additional blue)

Posted: 07 May 2019 04:48 AM PDT

Strange leg wiggles. Is this something to be concerned by? She just sits there and... wiggles

Posted: 07 May 2019 08:51 PM PDT

My one shrimp in his(her? Idk) bowl

Posted: 07 May 2019 05:59 PM PDT

Impatiently waiting for berries >:)

Posted: 07 May 2019 08:10 PM PDT

This pitiful little thing is 5 months old. It seems relatively happy and healthy but why won’t it grow?

Posted: 07 May 2019 03:50 PM PDT

Is this something I should worry about? Or is it just them sleeping and being cute?

Posted: 08 May 2019 12:14 AM PDT

20 gallon shrimp tank in college

Posted: 07 May 2019 09:21 PM PDT

Hello world,

I'm going to college in a few months and luckily I'll be attending a very pet friendly college. I'm allowed a 20-gallon wet tank as well as something else. Since I'm dorming, a fish tank is already a bit of a hassle especially if I'm moving the tank every year.

I was thinking that I'll have a shrimp tank and fill it with some kind of shrimp that breeds easily. I'll sell the babies throughout the year, and once the school year is up I can sell/give away whatever's left over. I'd probably repeat this every year until I get an apartment or whatever. Thoughts? Ideas? Concerns?

submitted by /u/theshrimpyshrimp
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More Bluegreen Pics!!

Posted: 07 May 2019 11:09 AM PDT

My first babies almost big enough to photograph in focus (snowballs, roughly 1week old)

Posted: 07 May 2019 05:39 PM PDT

The Shrimps.

Posted: 07 May 2019 09:51 AM PDT

Could it be muscular necrosis? The shrimp on the right has a milky yellow inside. I noticed this about a week ago, but they seem ok, normal activity and still eating.

Posted: 07 May 2019 11:32 AM PDT

Little advice

Posted: 07 May 2019 03:24 PM PDT

So I got this marineland portrait 5gal and 4 cherry shrimp, they keep getting into the filter and into the back of the tank, the filter is built into the back of the tank is there anyway I can stop this from happening?

submitted by /u/Ahab37
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Bluegreen Mama

Posted: 07 May 2019 12:12 PM PDT

What the F is this?!?! Bug of some sort?

Posted: 07 May 2019 08:08 PM PDT

I don't think they need to shave....

Posted: 07 May 2019 07:53 PM PDT

The short of it.

10 gallon. Heavily planted. I mean.... heavy. Colony of shrimp. Pretty sure I'm seeing vorticella. Fuzzy rostrum. Salt dip will not be effective as I can't get to all of them. Any luck with other methods in tank wide treatments? Thanks peeps

submitted by /u/GreatPlainsAquarist
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Not so red.

Posted: 07 May 2019 06:16 AM PDT

I could watch this damn shrimp all day long��

Posted: 07 May 2019 10:55 AM PDT

Have shrimp arriving. Need advice after original plan plan failed.

Posted: 07 May 2019 06:37 PM PDT

I have shrimp arriving tomorrow. I had a 10g tank I was cycling for 2 months now ready for some shrimp.

I no longer have that tank (bug bomb set off. Cycle is crashed.)

I have 3 options:

Put them in a heavily planted 10g tank where my betta resides.

Or put them in a very heavily planted 29g with a LOT of moss and cover. There's 7 corys, 15 cardinal tetras, a dwarf gourami, 3 Amano shrimp, and "7" RCS. (I've only ever seen 3 at a time. Not sure if the rest got eaten or are hidden).

3rd option is to put them in an uncycled planted 10g. (Or move the betta here temporarily and do water changes?)

What would you do?

submitted by /u/jescereal
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How many shrimp is too many

Posted: 07 May 2019 07:45 AM PDT

One of my tanks in the office, a heavily planted fluval spec V is overloaded with shrimp. Should I ever worry about bioload or population control? Literally hundreds of babies probably. When I move the floating plants, so many scatter. Same with the moss. If I had to guess there are about 50-75 adults and who knows how many babies.

I even have the filter within the filter to block babies from going into the back filter section yet somehow a few has made their way in.

Can't believe how prolific these little buggers are!

submitted by /u/OnYourSide
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Hello, can I join those cherry shrimp you've got in that big tank there? (Question and details in comments)

Posted: 07 May 2019 06:16 PM PDT

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