green shrimp generation time
Moderator: Mustafa
green shrimp generation time
I got my first batch of Caridina cf. babaulti babies about 5 months ago. At this point, the young are still only half-grown so I figure their generation time to be 10-12 months? I'm wondering if anyone else has a similar experience, or am I doing something horribly wrong to stunt their growth?
I remember Kenshin saying he thought his infant daughter grew faster than these guys, and I have to say I agree!
on a green-ish shrimp sidenote: badflash, how are you green N. heteropoda doing? Any new pics? That one large, dark green female you had was just beautiful. The best looking green Neocaridina I've seen.
I remember Kenshin saying he thought his infant daughter grew faster than these guys, and I have to say I agree!
on a green-ish shrimp sidenote: badflash, how are you green N. heteropoda doing? Any new pics? That one large, dark green female you had was just beautiful. The best looking green Neocaridina I've seen.
It all really depends on what kind of green shrimp you have, water quality and what type of food is available. Certain micro-organisms make all shrimp grow much faster than others. I've had green shrimp that grew to adult size within a month and a half and started carrying eggs. I've had others that took half a year almost. The same can happen with red cherry shrimp by the way...although less extreme. My research and observations on this are ongoing....
Wouldn't that be great? "Shrimp Super Micro-Food!" "Makes your green shrimp grow to the size of a small dog!!"
Joking aside, since other factors (e.g. water quality) play a role, too, I doubt there will ever be a packaged product like that. Rather, we have to identify the exact factors that play a role and strive to achieve the right conditions for those factors to become "dominant" in the shrimp tank. One "easy" way to circumvent all of that is to just have a very large tank (55 gallons minimum). There is usually tons of food growing in such a tank and it's much harder to mess up the water quality in larger bodies of water.

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- Tiny Shrimp
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LMAO!! That I'd have to see.Mustafa wrote: "Shrimp Super Micro-Food!" "Makes your green shrimp grow to the size of a small dog!!"
that's a great point. I wish I had the room for a giant invert-only tank. Maybe a 55 gal just for that 1 chihuahua-sized CaridinaOne "easy" way to circumvent all of that is to just have a very large tank (55 gallons minimum). There is usually tons of food growing in such a tank and it's much harder to mess up the water quality in larger bodies of water.

JK, that's a great observation. It's easy to imagine that the higher surface area of the sand substrate cultures more micro-critters. Which, as we all know, is really what dwarf shrimp prefer to eat over prepared foods.
- Neonshrimp
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- Tiny Shrimp
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- Neonshrimp
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- Tiny Shrimp
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They're still small compared to my original, mature females, however, I've seen young female cherries berry up before they are full grown as well. So I guess I'd compare them to that. These females aren't berried yet, just saddled.Neonshrimp wrote:Have these offspring reached adult size to be berried or are they still small?
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