I just picked up a copy of AWAVE Magazine for March. It's a bimonthly aquarium magazine here in Japan with 250 pages of information. The March issue has a 50 page article called Keeping & Breeding Guide Of Red Bee Shrimp and Cherry Shrimp.
It goes into great detail on all aspects of the shrimp from keeping them to raising them for commercial sale, grading, appropriate tankmates and other topics to do with these shrimp.
There are lots of pictures, diagrams and charts covering all aspects.
In all there's too much information for me to comfortably translate in the article.
another page on CRS, including grading standards
Moderator: Mustafa
hmmmedinjapan wrote:I just picked up a copy of AWAVE Magazine for March. It's a bimonthly aquarium magazine here in Japan with 250 pages of information. The March issue has a 50 page article called Keeping & Breeding Guide Of Red Bee Shrimp and Cherry Shrimp.
It goes into great detail on all aspects of the shrimp from keeping them to raising them for commercial sale, grading, appropriate tankmates and other topics to do with these shrimp.
There are lots of pictures, diagrams and charts covering all aspects.
In all there's too much information for me to comfortably translate in the article.
it is not of course in english

Not's not exactly true, because the wikipedia's articles are contributed and edited by people knowledgeable in their field. I'm sure most of them does have a clue.DatDamWuf wrote:Mustafa, I hope you or someone else as knowledgeable will correct the wikipedia info! the folks that host it know things are sometimes put there that are wrong and are good about allowing corrections. I'm sure none of them have a clue about shrimp!

You obviously have no idea how Wikipedia works. Anybody (not just "people knowleadgeable in their fields") can edit information on Wikipedia. It's never a good idea to just assume things are correct. Hence saying "I'm sure" is not a good idea if you are really not sure at all.shrimping wrote: Not's not exactly true, because the wikipedia's articles are contributed and edited by people knowledgeable in their field. I'm sure most of them does have a clue.
It is true that anybody can put contribute information on wikipedia, but any wrong info that gets in gets edited back out. Just find any page on wikipedia on any topic and put in something wrong and see if it edited out, you'll be surprised how fast it will be!Mustafa wrote:You obviously have no idea how Wikipedia works. Anybody (not just "people knowleadgeable in their fields") can edit information on Wikipedia. It's never a good idea to just assume things are correct. Hence saying "I'm sure" is not a good idea if you are really not sure at all.shrimping wrote: Not's not exactly true, because the wikipedia's articles are contributed and edited by people knowledgeable in their field. I'm sure most of them does have a clue.

Like I said, I am sure most of them that put the information there that we can see(ie not edited out) does have a clue. If I am not sure at all then I wouldn't be saying I'm sure, would I?
Yes, that's probably true with subjects that are clear cut. With subjects that are not so clear cut, I can imagine that there can be "editing wars" where people from several opinion camps keep editing out the entries of the others. In the end nobody knows what's right and what's wrong.shrimping wrote:It is true that anybody can put contribute information on wikipedia, but any wrong info that gets in gets edited back out. Just find any page on wikipedia on any topic and put in something wrong and see if it edited out, you'll be surprised how fast it will be!![]()
Not necessarily.Like I said, I am sure most of them that put the information there that we can see(ie not edited out) does have a clue.


The same would, of course, not be true with common topics like tennis, or chess, or physics, as there are a lot more people knowledgeable about these issues.
I believe you that you are sure.If I am not sure at all then I wouldn't be saying I'm sure, would I?
