"Rainbow Shrimp"
Moderator: Mustafa
What could be learned is.
The Species that are Dieing or decreasing will not tolerate the water out of your tap.
If you still want to try and keep these Species. You will have to adjust your water paramiters to suit them.
Or, like badflash said.
Check with your water company to see what they are putting in the water and if they have change what they are using lately.
If only certain Species are dying, you said that the Cherries, Amanos,Woods, and Vampires are doing Ok.
Then I would have to say the water parameters are not to there liking.
I also have Hard water.
And I have had to learn all over again when I started to keep the "Soft" water Species.
Useing different substrates, constantly checking PH.
I have learn that this Hobby
Is just not adding Shrimp to your tank and hopeing that they will live.
But to find the best water parameter for each Species.
TKD
You did not sound like a jerk.
I just did not explain my response well enough
John
The Species that are Dieing or decreasing will not tolerate the water out of your tap.
If you still want to try and keep these Species. You will have to adjust your water paramiters to suit them.
Or, like badflash said.
Check with your water company to see what they are putting in the water and if they have change what they are using lately.
If only certain Species are dying, you said that the Cherries, Amanos,Woods, and Vampires are doing Ok.
Then I would have to say the water parameters are not to there liking.
I also have Hard water.
And I have had to learn all over again when I started to keep the "Soft" water Species.
Useing different substrates, constantly checking PH.
I have learn that this Hobby
Is just not adding Shrimp to your tank and hopeing that they will live.
But to find the best water parameter for each Species.
TKD
You did not sound like a jerk.
I just did not explain my response well enough
John
RCS have a broader parameter range from soft /Acidic to Hard /Alkaline
"Rainbows" are more to the Hard/Alkaline side.
And if you received your Rainbows and they were Adult Wild caught
They will have a harder time adjusting to the different water parameters.
Than young Shrimp.
And the stress alone going from Exporter/Importer/LPS will lessen there life span.
John
"Rainbows" are more to the Hard/Alkaline side.
And if you received your Rainbows and they were Adult Wild caught
They will have a harder time adjusting to the different water parameters.
Than young Shrimp.
And the stress alone going from Exporter/Importer/LPS will lessen there life span.
John
- ToddnBecka
- Shrimpoholic
- Posts: 363
- Joined: Wed May 24, 2006 11:12 pm
- Location: Western Maryland
That was my thought as well, imported or wild-caught shrimp seem to die off much faster than tank-raised shrimp. It isn't necessarily anything you are (or aren't) doing that is causing them to die. Some of the tanks I've seen in various pet shops make me hesitant to buy fish from them, much less shrimp. They often use the shotgun approach; throw a large number of critters into a tank, and sell the ones that don't die first... 

Ok I guess I can't count as I have one left
I just removed a suspect rock.. i.e. the only rock that was in the tank, hopefully it will help. (I don't think the rock has really anything to do with it as the cajuns were already dying in another tank and when the cherries were in there there was no problem)
I'm in contact with the LSF owner and he says that they were in the store for three weeks and that he is 99% sure that they are captive bread.
So one "rainbow" shrimp and two cajuns in an 18 Gal toat....
TKD

I just removed a suspect rock.. i.e. the only rock that was in the tank, hopefully it will help. (I don't think the rock has really anything to do with it as the cajuns were already dying in another tank and when the cherries were in there there was no problem)
I'm in contact with the LSF owner and he says that they were in the store for three weeks and that he is 99% sure that they are captive bread.
So one "rainbow" shrimp and two cajuns in an 18 Gal toat....
TKD
That does not mean anything. LFS owners rarely have an idea where exactly their shrimp come from as most get their fish and shrimp from wholesalers. Even the wholesalers have no clue. We've had people here claiming that their LFS store told them that their african filter shrimp (or was it the asian? Same point either way...) were all captive bred.....although nobody has ever reported breeding them.TKD wrote:
I'm in contact with the LSF owner and he says that they were in the store for three weeks and that he is 99% sure that they are captive bread.
TKD

Either way, captive bred or not...they are all in bad condition when they are imported. Even imported red cherries, which are captive bred in farms, arrive in as bad a shape here in the US as wild-caught shrimp. It's the stress of shipping hundreds and thousands of shrimp in ONE tiny bag and very little water that does them in...
- Neonshrimp
- Master Shrimp Nut
- Posts: 2296
- Joined: Wed May 24, 2006 5:37 pm
- Location: California, USA
The things they will do to keep cost down and maximize profitIt's the stress of shipping hundreds and thousands of shrimp in ONE tiny bag and very little water that does them in...



- Neonshrimp
- Master Shrimp Nut
- Posts: 2296
- Joined: Wed May 24, 2006 5:37 pm
- Location: California, USA
Hi TDK
Could you post some Pictures ?
If they are a Dwarf shrimp and they are 2.5 months old they shoud be breeding for you or very close.
Given the massive losses from before and the fact that your shrimp are not breeding there may be something still wrong with your water parameters.
If adult Female shrimp are not berried most of the time, they are not happy.
John
Could you post some Pictures ?
If they are a Dwarf shrimp and they are 2.5 months old they shoud be breeding for you or very close.
Given the massive losses from before and the fact that your shrimp are not breeding there may be something still wrong with your water parameters.
If adult Female shrimp are not berried most of the time, they are not happy.
John
My camera wont give clear shots of something that small
It is strange and cherries were holding eggs in that tank under the same conditions and the bumble bee shrimp droped her eggs there (I have more then six babies that I can see)
Other then the pH beeing over 7.2 I can't tell you much, sorry.
TKD

It is strange and cherries were holding eggs in that tank under the same conditions and the bumble bee shrimp droped her eggs there (I have more then six babies that I can see)
Other then the pH beeing over 7.2 I can't tell you much, sorry.
TKD