Shrimp that can be kept with fry
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- Larva
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Shrimp that can be kept with fry
Well, since I had to give up keeping vampire shrimp(don't have a spare tank) I'm looking for a different kind of shrimp to keep. I was originally planning to keep 1 vampire in my ten gallon tank with my fry but instead, is there any other kind of shrimp that I can keep with fry?
- Neonshrimp
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- Larva
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- Larva
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Thank you, Badflash, thats good to hear
So could I keep some of them with Neocardinia species? The ones that look like cherries but are transparent? I kept them in the past, they were wonderful so I was wondering if it were possible. But aren't there stories of fry being eaten by ghost shrimp?(not the same species)

I think you have a wild-type variant of Neocaridina denticulata denticulata or N. denticulata sinensis in mind. If you plan to use the tank for fry grow-out purposes, these particular shrimp will be continuously picked at or consumed as the fish mature.Asian_Vampire wrote:Thank you, Badflash, thats good to hear :D So could I keep some of them with Neocardinia species? The ones that look like cherries but are transparent? I kept them in the past, they were wonderful so I was wondering if it were possible.
Depending on locality, the term "ghost shrimp" refers to one or more species from the genus Palaemonetes, Macrobrachium, or Palaemon (Korea's most common ghost shrimp analogue is the native Palaemon paucidens). As Badflash mentioned, species from the last two genera in particular should not be kept with fry. :lol:Asian_Vampire wrote:But aren't there stories of fry being eaten by ghost shrimp?(not the same species)
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- Larva
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- Neonshrimp
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I think the general message is that your fry will pick on the shrimp as they get bigger.badflash wrote:Except for Macrobrachium and Palaemonetes species, the fry have nothing to fear from the shrimp. The shrimp are in far more danger from the fry. An adult shrimp will have no problems with fry, but once the fry get a little size, they will harass the shrimp.
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But what are you trying to tell me, Veneer?
I think something is being lost in the translation. Just because a shrimp is tranparent does not mean it is a ghost shrimp. The term ghost shrimp has pretty much lost its meaning. If you have wild type Neocaridina or Caridina the shrimp will only be interested in dead fry.
Macrobrachium, Palaemonetes and Palaemon they may pick off a few fish if they get the chance.
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- Larva
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Goodbadflash wrote:
I think something is being lost in the translation. Just because a shrimp is tranparent does not mean it is a ghost shrimp. The term ghost shrimp has pretty much lost its meaning. If you have wild type Neocaridina or Caridina the shrimp will only be interested in dead fry.
Macrobrachium, Palaemonetes and Palaemon they may pick off a few fish if they get the chance.

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