In 2003 I bought 10 while on a tour of brisbane fish shops. I had them bagged with O2 and in the largest fish bag they had. within 20 mins, 2 were dead and by the time I arrived back at the hotel4 hours later, there were 5 remaining. I was not expecting such a high mortality rate for things that were bagged with O2 and did not appear to be attacking one another.
When we got back to our hotel that day, the remaining shrimp were put in an esky with heavy airation and zeolite.
This worked slightly better, and after a 14hr trip to Sydney, I had 4 remaining.
These were put in a temperate tank (21-22*C) and within 6 days, all had succumbed to some sort of problem that appeared to 'cook' their flesh, starting at the long pincers. They didn't look distressed and were eating and grooming perfectly well.
Photograph of the last remaining creature:

Anyway, last week, I took another trip out of state and decided to try again, on the spur of the moment (always a bad thing with aquatics, but I did it anyway). I did not have an esky or pumps with me, so I was changing the water daily, and had the creatures in 1G bottles. As they were only the size of our common atyidae shrimp, I reasoned that this would be suitable. 3 to a bottle, twice daily water changes, surely that would be enough? nope.
So, long story short, I have a single shrimp remaining.
He (or she, didn't look) is perfectly content scuttling around on the bottom of my 2' planted tropical tank. Its an Asian region tank, and has some very large B. fusca and B. falx in there, as well has masses of MTS and some very large kuhli loaches.
I am holding my breath on this one, as he seems to be doing well.
I cannot keep him in this tank forever, I will need to move him, and I don't want to lose him because of it.
I need to know what these shrimp require for survival, as obviously I haven't been providing it prior to now.
I also need to know how to hold these shrimp for several days, and how to ship them via a courier. I intended to have a small group, not a lone scavenger, and i'll be buggered if I don't get it right the third time around. As it is, I'm close on giving up on the concept of ever being able to keep them

Here is the photo of him/her

Oh, and Hi, i'm new here. I've been keeping Charax species for about 15 years, and have dabbled in a few other inverts including atyidae shrimp, FW mussels and many species of snail.
I am an avid fishkeeper with my main focus on betta species, and I have a soft spot for all things aquatic and unusual

Nice to meet you all
