badflash wrote:geofied- What makes you think that fungus or bacteria can only be caught from fish or other shrimp? Either can be airborn, or transferred in any number of other ways. It could also have been latent in the shrimp all along. Fact is we know next to nothing about this shrimp other than the picture. Fact is the shrimp looks odd an other shrimp do not show this.
What is your theory?
badflash, I wasn't asserting that a fungus and/or bacteria would be only transferred via animal contact, I apologize if I was confusing. I am saying that
if there is a bacteria or fungus that is attacking shrimp, be it water-born, air-born, etc., then it would likely affect my other inverts as well (which it hasn't). I agree it is plausible that
if this is a disease (non-fungal/non-bacterial) endemic to Ghost Shrimp, it may be latent and comes out in time. That could explain why only Ghost shrimp seem to show these symptoms. I think this will be difficult, at best, to prove, however.
I'm still in the process of laying out the pieces, and am not sure I have a working theory yet. I've been searching the forums here and on the rest of the web for additional clues. My GS only tank I setup a couple of months ago has more-or-less eliminated some of the environmental factors I was considering as potential causes (stress from other livestock, overcrowding, to name a few). At this point I am leaning toward an as-yet unknown variable that is causing the GS to stop moulting. The questions that come to mind are:
1. Do Ghost shrimp have different specific requirements than the other Dwarf shrimp that we keep in the hobby?
2. Are there folks out there that do not have this problem with their GS? And if so what factors are different from those of us that do?
BTW, badflash, the picture posted above is exactly what my stricken Ghosts look like, and what many others have described. I'll try to get a few snaps of my own, time permitting.
-Regards