A couple of days ago I started my first opae ula tank. I have been reading a lot of posts in this forum and finally decided to share my experience so far and also make a couple of questions. Excuse me for the long post!

So I had an ecosphere I got as a low maintenance pet. It came with 4 small shrimps and initially I found it really cool. However in a couple of months 3 of them had disappeared, and there remained just one sad and forlorn little shrimp. It was depressing so I kind of forgot about it for like two years (I know, bad). A couple of weeks ago I found this site and after seeing Mustafa’s articles I decided that the right and obvious thing to do was saving the poor thing and getting him new friends.
I read all the instructions: got a one-gallon tank, filled it with brackish water and a week later put in Mustafa’s macroalgae and snails, my ecosphere prisoner and a juvenile stowaway shrimp that came hidden in the algae. My tank was getting there.
Everybody looked good, the snails were roaming around like crazy and the two shrimp settled after the first day and were pretty much hiding afterwards but seemed ok. This was the original tank:
I am not a very patient person so even though I read that it was good to cycle the tank for a couple more weeks, I couldn’t wait and ordered 20 shrimps from Mustafa. A few days later I had them home.
At that point the tank had contained just water for a week and then algae+snails+two shrimps for another week. Hopefully the water from the ecosphere and also from Mustafa’s snail bag had created a nice bacterial soup for the newcomers.
But then before putting in the 21 shrimp I got I thought what the heck, go big or go home so I decided to give the animals more space. I opened the mail package, took out the shrimp but kept them in the bag and literally ran out to buy the new tank. The problem is that the capacity was more than double the one I had. So I went ahead and mixed the brackish water on the spot, put all the water and stuff from the small tank, added the brand new, completely un-cycled extra water and just dumped everybody in, old residents and new shrimps.
I am sure that I did like 99 out of 100 mistakes when setting up a new tank. But the truth is that 3 days later the shrimps seem to be in pretty good shape. There’s constant activity in the tank, everybody is either swimming of grazing their invisible food. I have seen no casualties, but perhaps I’ve lost some, I don’t know, because I am incapable of counting them, they move around so much. I don’t know if I got lucky, if these little guys are amazingly resilient or a combination of both, but so far so good. Here’s a couple of pics of the 2.5 gallon tank:
So after my long intro, a few questions:
1. First and foremost, for a grand total of 23 shrimps in a 2.5 gallon tank, how much and how often should I feed them to optimize their health and also their reproductive success? Considering the way I set up a tank with very little cycling, I suspect that there are not many algae in the water. In fact it looks quite clear. No slime or film, just Mustafa’s macroalgae and some thinner algae that came from the ecosphere and are growing alone and on top of the sphere dead gorgonia I used for decoration. They are swimming or grazing all the time, no hiding or staying quiet. So again how much and how often shall I feed them?
2. I can’t wait to have the shrimps reproducing (shocking)

3. Along the same lines, in order to promote ovulation I’ve read that a higher salinity is better. Should I not replenish completely the evaporated water?
4. Finally, moving on to tank aesthetics, even before getting the shrimps I bought on amazon a couple of marimo balls that were advertised as brackish plants. One is huge but the small one fits better in my tank. However I’ve read in other posts that apparently they are bad for shrimps because the die and decay and change the tank’s chemistry. Any suggestions?
Ok I truly apologize for the extra long post. I promise I’ll keep it short in the future! Thanks for reading and I am looking forward to your suggestions!


