My Cambarellus crays(berried montezumae pictures added!)

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milalic
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Post by milalic »

To the eye they look very similar. You might need to look at them more closely. I can see differences between them from the top and the pincers. A friend help me identify them using a microscope and one of the keys that Yucca provided.
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Post by Neonshrimp »

Thanks for the pictures. The babies are so cute :-D
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C. montezumae pictures

Post by milalic »

Here are some pictures of an adult one. Will try to take better shots later.

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Cheers,
Pedro
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Post by michiganmale248 »

Nice looking crays. These are C. puer right?
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Post by milalic »

first set of pictures is C. puer(the ones that show babies).
Second set of pictures is C. montezumae.

-Pedro
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C. montezumae berried female

Post by milalic »

I have two C. montezumae berried females. Here are pictures pf one of them:

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Enjoy,
Pedro
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Post by Neonshrimp »

Very nice, congratulations Pedro :-D
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Post by FISH WORLD ERIE »

More nice pics.
Thanks,
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Post by michiganmale248 »

Nice, Keep up the good work.
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Post by ToddnBecka »

The pattern on the berried female C. montezumae looks quite similar to C. patzcuarensis, but a different color. Do the montezumae also have another pattern, with stripes on the tail, like the other dwarf species?
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Post by YuccaPatrol »

See if you can estimate the number of eggs initially produced compared to the number of eggs that make it all the way through development.

I am having good initial success isolating females in floating plastic guppy breeder tanks. My female C. diminutus seem to hold onto more eggs if they are isolated and not disturbed.
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Post by milalic »

ToddnBecka wrote:The pattern on the berried female C. montezumae looks quite similar to C. patzcuarensis, but a different color. Do the montezumae also have another pattern, with stripes on the tail, like the other dwarf species?
They have different patterns. This is juts one of around 8 I have.
I will try to take pictures of the others.
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Post by milalic »

YuccaPatrol wrote:See if you can estimate the number of eggs initially produced compared to the number of eggs that make it all the way through development.

I am having good initial success isolating females in floating plastic guppy breeder tanks. My female C. diminutus seem to hold onto more eggs if they are isolated and not disturbed.
Right now I do not have space for isolating females. Too many critters.By the time I see them it has probably been days or weeks since she had the eggs.
I can roughly estimate that she has at least 20 eggs.

-Pedro
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Post by Mustafa »

Pedro, how are you so sure that these crayfish are actually C. puer and C. montezumae? Your C. "montezumae" obviously came from Germany, unless you went to Mexico and caught them yourself. The thing about C. montezumae, C. patzcuarensis and C. chapalanus from Germany is that the people who have been breeding them in Germany have had a very hard time distinguishing among them. So, they usually go by what the guy who sold them their crayfish told them. Also, many "wild type" C. patzcuarensis that were crossed with the orange ones were probably either C. montezumae and C. chapalanus.

Anyway, as a result of this confusion the likelihood that all of the mexican Cambarellus from Germany are hybrids (including the orange ones) is quite high.

As for your C. puer....did you get that one from Germany, too, of did you catch it yourself? A little more background information on their origin would be helpful to rule out any possibility of misidentification. After all, there are some people out there in Germany who probably have C. shufeldtii but believe that they have C. puer.
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Post by milalic »

Mustafa wrote:Pedro, how are you so sure that these crayfish are actually C. puer and C. montezumae? Your C. "montezumae" obviously came from Germany, unless you went to Mexico and caught them yourself. The thing about C. montezumae, C. patzcuarensis and C. chapalanus from Germany is that the people who have been breeding them in Germany have had a very hard time distinguishing among them. So, they usually go by what the guy who sold them their crayfish told them. Also, many "wild type" C. patzcuarensis that were crossed with the orange ones were probably either C. montezumae and C. chapalanus.

Anyway, as a result of this confusion the likelihood that all of the mexican Cambarellus from Germany are hybrids (including the orange ones) is quite high.

As for your C. puer....did you get that one from Germany, too, of did you catch it yourself? A little more background information on their origin would be helpful to rule out any possibility of misidentification. After all, there are some people out there in Germany who probably have C. shufeldtii but believe that they have C. puer.
I am sure I have C. puer...some of them were collected in the wild in Houston. Identifying the C. puer was easy because one of them died and a friend helped me identify it with one of the keys(same as what Yucca posted). I think I mentioned that somewhere above.

The C. montezumae, I got them from Germany and from Mexico. I was not the one who collected them over there in Mexico. It was a family member. Visually both crays from Germany and Mexico look similar. There is variance in their coloration and patterns. I still need to identify it using the keys, but I am ot sure I can do this without a dead specimen. This is all the information I have at the moment.

Both crays have started to breed in my tanks.

-Pedro
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