Green shrimp or not? Pic inside

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ming
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Green shrimp or not? Pic inside

Post by ming »

Image
next to the cherry shrimp
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Post by Mustafa »

Looks like a "Green Shrimp" (Caridina cf. babaulti) to me. If you could take a picture of the shrimp from the side, it would be more helpful, though.
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Post by gnatster »

I know this has been covered before but I must be searching the wrong terms. Will that genus of "Green Shrimp" mate with a Cherry Shrimp and create a hybrid?

Sorry, I know this was covered elsewhere but I can't seem to find it.
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Post by amanda_h »

Hey gnat, that was me who asked that before (and possibly others before me). Mustafa says no.
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Post by Mustafa »

I say "no" and "not yet" so far. But that does not make it impossible. We (science in general) do not know enough about these shrimp genetically to categorically say "no" to any possibility of hybrids, except in cases where the larval development is drastically different between any two species.

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Post by amanda_h »

Well, this is just my personal experience, but I've got greens and cherries together in the same tank. I have both female and male greens, and they're happily breeding. But the cherries I have are all females, and while I see them developing eggs all the time, without males they aren't having babies.

Which tells me that the male greens are mating with the female greens, but not with the female cherries.
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Post by ming »

Thanks
That answered pretty much all my questions
I see a lot of familiar names from another forum :wink:
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Post by amber2461 »

Welcome Ming
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Post by amanda_h »

*waves*
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Post by gnatster »

I see a lot of familiar names from another forum
Yes, quite interesting that way some of us plant folks split our time. Now how do we bring the shrimpers into the plant fold?
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Post by amanda_h »

I've been pullin' them over one at a time. :wink:
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Post by Acsuth »

But the cherries I have are all females, and while I see them developing eggs all the time, without males they aren't having babies.
Do the developing eggs appear fertile? If so, perhaps the green males are mating with the females but the eggs never make it to hatching. Either way, it's a true indication of completely different species IMO.
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