They are neither Amano nor snowball shrimp. Actually, it looks like you are showing us two different species on your pictures. The shrimp on the third and fourth picture are different from the others. Those particular shrimp belong to the Caridina nilotica "group" of shrimp, but which particular species they are I don't know. I have had them before and they came from India. They get pretty large actually, larger than most dwarf shrimp.
As for the the other shrimp...I have no idea. One of the many unidentified "mystery" species that are being imported.
Jorge wrote:Someone has suggested here that could be Aetyaephyra desmaresti what do you think???? [/url]
It's not A. desmaresti. It's body shape and rostrum look totally different. People there are just taking wild guesses at this point. Nobody seems to have noticed that you actually have two species on your pictures (and you really do...trust me). You're not going to be able to identify every mystery shrimp at this point unless the shrimp is one of the more commonly seen species/varieties.
I could see a slight difference in the body shape, but , the rostrum
I could not see a difference.
John
It all comes with practice. You can't really tell how many "teeth" the shrimp have on their rostrum just by looking at a picture, but you can tell the rostrum shape and length after a while. It does take some training though.
Newjohn wrote:
Is there any reference material, In english, That I could read up on.
Yes, there is, but it's all scientific journal articles and you need either a university access account or a private subscription to scientific article delivery service (something like 800+ dollars a year) to receive those articles. Even then, it's too much scientific gibberish to be understandable to most hobbyists. Those "teeth" are one of the things that scientists look at when trying to differentiate species. I personally think this physical characteristic type of species classification is flawed, as there is huge variation even within a single species.
For our purposes, externally visible characteristics (color, body shape, rostrum shape) and intermixability are more important when it comes to identifying various shrimp varieties. Then we'll wait for the scientists to "discover" those species and actually provide a scientific name.