Photoperiod
Posted: Tue May 01, 2007 6:40 pm
My P. pugio shrimp tank is all over the place lately. I've had a blue-green algae problem in it and when daylight savings came around I decided to cut back on the photoperiod from 12.5 hours to 9 hours. This resulted in all of the females loosing their ripened ovaries (saddle) after the next molt. These shrimp were all collected at ~38 degrees N latitude.
I thought that was interesting since I collected some of them last October when none of the females had saddles - and they took ~ 3-4weeks to regenerate their saddle at a >12 hr photoperiod.
This got me thinking. Since equatorial shrimp have days =12.00 hours long for aeons, how sensitive are they to changes in photoperiod versus higher latitude shrimp? Are we supposed to choose a minimum photoperiod for all shrimp or do we go by latitude at which the species live? I searched the site but couldn't find much...
This was helpful: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c ... ength.jpeg . At 38N latitude and to replicate their natural photoperiod cycle, these shrimp exist somewhere between 9 hours (winter) and 15 hours (summer) of daylight. I guess anytime over 12 hours works great to simulate spring/summer - but it seems the optimal cutoff would vary by species...or not? Maybe its not even important as long as any freshwater species gets >12 hours. I guess my question is what is the minimal timer setting I need?
I thought that was interesting since I collected some of them last October when none of the females had saddles - and they took ~ 3-4weeks to regenerate their saddle at a >12 hr photoperiod.
This got me thinking. Since equatorial shrimp have days =12.00 hours long for aeons, how sensitive are they to changes in photoperiod versus higher latitude shrimp? Are we supposed to choose a minimum photoperiod for all shrimp or do we go by latitude at which the species live? I searched the site but couldn't find much...
This was helpful: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c ... ength.jpeg . At 38N latitude and to replicate their natural photoperiod cycle, these shrimp exist somewhere between 9 hours (winter) and 15 hours (summer) of daylight. I guess anytime over 12 hours works great to simulate spring/summer - but it seems the optimal cutoff would vary by species...or not? Maybe its not even important as long as any freshwater species gets >12 hours. I guess my question is what is the minimal timer setting I need?