Yes, you have the real deal- Caridina cf. babaulti. Please post pictures as 800X600 so they fit the screen properly.
I'd love to find some more of these. The combo of this and Red Cherries is really impressive. When I had these I didn't know what I was doing and killed them.
Yes, these are green shrimp from the shrimp varieties page. That brownish stuff on the shell is not normal though. Is probably a sign of some kind of shell disease. The problem with green shrimp is that they usually arrive in the worst condition of any shrimp species I have seen imported.
I received 2 different batches of Green shrimps from 2 different dealers. One dealer stated to me that it was imported so when I received them, it was basically all females plus it was not pure Greeen shrimps - more like Rainbow shrimps. Well anyhow, they all died later on as they were stressed for quiet some time already. That is when I started to learn from my own experiences about the problems from import. Don't buy them especially after all my incidents with dealers for bumblebee shrimps.
The 2nd batch I received was actually Green shrimps. That dealer stated he bred them himself/herself. It is more like from shrimpnow.com (if I am not supposed to put other forum names here, then I do sincerely apologize right now Mustafa - and I will remove the website name right away). They are breeding and living very happily until my Rusty Macro. shrimp ate most of them by capturing (stupid me for not believing in "predator vs prey"). Well anyhow, the Rusty Macro. shrimp have been separated, and the Green shrimps are breeding again (see my previous threads - just type in search for Green shrimps with my username in it). And I have never see those brown patches on my Green shrimps at all so far Newjohn. It might be from stress or some sort of disease. I hope you do not give up hope though. Take care.
The green shrimp are real eye catchers! I keep thinking how good they would look in a tank planted with all dark reddish plants and black substrate. Do you guys who keep them with RCS notice any interaction between the two?
If, this is a shell disease, can it be spread to other Shrimp ?
Is there any way to Cure it ?
It does not seem to affect other shrimp in a aquarium setup. It seems to be related to the shrimp getting stressed out and being more susceptible to disease. There is really no way to cure it but to just wait it out. Either your shrimp survives or it dies.
These came in as "Geen Arrow Shrimp".
Yeah..you'll see the same shrimp sold under a million names out there. Another thing that adds to the confusion, in addition to the fact that you will get completely different species of shrimp sold under the same name, too, as Kenshin already pointed out.
I have also bought Green Shrimp off a auction site. And had only one survive.
I have work out a plan with a LFS , to get what ever shrimp are on his list at cost or trade for shrimp I already have.
He also maintain's Aquarims ,and has a need for Shrimp, but , has no idea or time to keep and breed them.
The Red Cherry Shrimp have went over very well around here.
I know I will have a hard time getting in Green Shrimp, that are not on there Death bed, when I receive them.
But , I think, it will be worth it , when I get a colony going.
Mustafa
Thank You
For the information on the brown discoloation.
I will cross my fingers and hope for the best.
Newjohn wrote:Well
1 of my Greens went to the " big shrimp bowl " in the sky.
Funny thing, it was not the one with the brown discoloration.
I hope more people can start , keeping and breeding the Green Shrimp.
So that there can be a better source for them. Instead of buying half dead ones from the LFS.
Just My Thoughts
John
Sorry to hear about it, but as you now now it's more the norm than the exception with imported shrimp. As for a "better source", I've been working on it for a while. These shrimp are very sensitive to dissolved organics in the water and need absolutely clean water to do well. Hence, it's been harder to breed in numbers than some other shrimp.
Newjohn wrote:
Would it be best to keep the "Greens", in a Plant free tank ?
John
Quite the opposite. I would stuff the tank full of something fast growing like Najas sp., so that the plants can take up organic compounds such as nitrate. You're already doing daily water changes, which is great by the way. Dissolved organics does not necessarily mean "rotting plants." Dead plant parts decay very slowly, so I would not worry too much about it. With something like Najas you won't have that problem really as najas rarely ever sheds leaves and even lower leaves in darker parts of the tank still stay alive, green and on the plant (as opposed to Egeria densa for example). That's why I have Najas in all of my tanks.
Dissolved organics includes stuff introduced to the tank through food directly and indirectly (i.e. shrimp waste, ammonia, nitrate etc). You can test ammonia and nitrate, but there are other compounds that we cannot measure. Frequent water changes and fast growing plants are the solution.