This is toally amazing! This generation of my green cherry shrimp are breeding true. There were no browns, oranges or ghosts on the last hatches of any of my females. here is a poor pic of a pregnant female on some java moss.
At this point they are about the same olive color as Amanos and blend it totally with the java moss. I'm guessing this must be a morph found in the wild as it is stable too soon to be resessive. Give the ability to blend in so well, it could survive quite well in the wild.
I guess that is the point of the picture. The shrimp blends in so well with the moss that it makes it hard to see . Althugh please post more picture of this great looking shrimp .
Unless I'm color blind. I'll go get my eyes checked just in case....
Sure look green to me. same as amanos. Maybe ican put an amano in the tank and take a side by side.
Why do you ask?
Last edited by badflash on Mon Oct 02, 2006 4:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
badflash wrote:Unless I'm color blind. I'll go get my eyes checked just in case....
Sure look greed to me. same as amanos. Maybe ican put an amano in the tank and take a side by side.
Why do you ask?
Because I cannot see any green...LOL. When I'm thinking green, I'm thinking *really* green...kinda like a green shrimp, or a green grasshopper etc. Are you saying the shrimp has a green hue?
No, these aren't green green like the green shrimp, but they are not brown, or red. If I had to describe the color I'd call it green, but an off shade. I'd call my amanos green too except for the blue one (lets not go there).
Heck, the blue crays I have aren't blue either, but they are blue-ish. They sure as heck aren't brown. These are all works in progress.
I'd call amanos "greyish." Your second picture of the Neocaridina does look greenish, though. You know...I would call these shrimp "Neocaridina sp." as you really don't know what type of wild Neocaridina went into the mix. It does not have to have been any N. denticulata of any kind, but a related Neocaridina species.