
" Blue " Cambarellus Shufeldtii CAJUN
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- Neonshrimp
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- YuccaPatrol
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- ToddnBecka
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Very nice crop of young ones, looks like you have a regular crayfish factory running smoothly. Now it's just a matter of selective breeding to produce the best color. I"m hoping the orange dwarfs will do as well when they get rolling. How much/often do you feed the young ones to prevent cannibalism? I'm assuming they're separated from the adults?
- badflash
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I feed them twice a day. Having loads of apple snails in the tank is a definite plus as there is little leftoover food. Apples are also more sensitive to water conditions, so they act as canaries for the crays.ToddnBecka wrote:Very nice crop of young ones, looks like you have a regular crayfish factory running smoothly. Now it's just a matter of selective breeding to produce the best color. I"m hoping the orange dwarfs will do as well when they get rolling. How much/often do you feed the young ones to prevent cannibalism? I'm assuming they're separated from the adults?
The adults don't seem to bother the babies. It looks like sibling cannibalism is the bigger problem. I remove as many babies as I can get during the water changes every week just to make room. As many as I pulled out today, there are still that many in the tank.
Lets hope I can keep this production up. Color morphs are a numbers game. You need lots of babies to get lucky. So far so good barring another disaster. If this keeps up they way I hope I can prooduce loads.
My plan is to convert the "pond" to a big grow-out tank once I find homes for the M. Rosenbergii.
- Neonshrimp
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- badflash
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None that I know of. The Asolene spixi remains relatively small though and breeds relatively slowly. The crays do a good job of eating the babies, so I keep a separate tank for hatching them. These eggs, unlike most apple snails, are underwater, so no special hatching care is needed other than good water and lack of critters that find them tasty.Neonshrimp wrote: Are there other snails that are sensitive enough to use as canaries?
If you have other questions, PM me or post in the "other Inverts" section.
- Neonshrimp
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- ToddnBecka
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Umm, relative to what?The Asolene spixi remains relatively small though and breeds relatively slowly.

I have 15 of the striped critters in the 30 with the crayfish and zhangjiajiensis, and there are at least 6-7 egg clusters in the plants. I have noticed fewer ramshorn eggs though, apparently the spixi's do eat most of those.

If/when all the spixi eggs hatch, I'll have about 10 times as many spixi's as I do now. I dropped a couple dozen peas into the tank, and they were all eaten within 24 hours.

- badflash
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You need more crays!
I get no rams, pond snails or spixis, but the crays sure do. Just about everything in my tank want to eat spixi eggs too.
The relative part is compared to a regular apple snail. They seem to be the ideal tank mate for dwarf crays to me. Nothing goes to waste. With Spixis and the Mutant Hornwort Jason sent me, things stay pretty good.
I get no rams, pond snails or spixis, but the crays sure do. Just about everything in my tank want to eat spixi eggs too.
The relative part is compared to a regular apple snail. They seem to be the ideal tank mate for dwarf crays to me. Nothing goes to waste. With Spixis and the Mutant Hornwort Jason sent me, things stay pretty good.
- Neonshrimp
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