I agree when it comes to our shrimpBetter safe than sorry I say![]()

Moderator: Mustafa
Great analogyit looked like a moss ball (or someone tore off a piece of the HULKs scalp)....
Very nice and efficient system, thanks for the tips and updateWhen they finish cleaning the outside of the sponge I will put it back in the shrimp tank....checking in occasionally to nap up any baby crayfish hitchhikers....
CanadianCray wrote:WOW this is a great idea. Can't believe I missed this topic for so long. How many people are using this for crayfish yet?? Do you find they are tearing it to bits or just cleaning it?
Little Update:
The really old sponge that I had in that one shrimp tank(Ten gallon).....(For maybe 6months now)....It accumulated a ton of algae to the point where it looked like a moss ball (or someone tore off a piece of the HULKs scalp).... The Red Cherry Shrimp seemed uninterested in eating this string and hair algae.... They tended to pick at the areas where this "moss" was absent....
Instead of throwing it away I put it in my Dwarf Cajun Crayfish tank (the sponge is still close to softball sized demonstrating its slow decay rate)....
I figure Ill let them clean off the sponge of the hair and string algae because they seem to love the stuff...then Ill place it back in the shrimp tank.....
So far the three biggest Dwarf Cajun's are monopolizing the prime spots on the sponge....playing king of the mountain occasionally...
The smaller ones pick at the sponge from the base.....
I figure in three days or so the sponge should be picked clean on the surface of all the string and hair algae that the crayfish can get at ....
When they finish cleaning the outside of the sponge I will put it back in the shrimp tank....checking in occasionally to nap up any baby crayfish hitchhikers....