I've read some of the comments below and find them misleading. Young man, the amount of sand is perfect. Crayfish LOVE to burrow. I might even add a little layer of muddy substrate under the sand, although it makes it more difficult to maintain aesthetically acceptable water quality. Trust me, the crayfish won't care. Keep the water clean enough to see through, but not crystalline; they don't live in nature that way. Add a tablet of calcium/magnesium every month or so to make it easier for them to molt. They live where there is a lot of dead wood and tannins in the water and don't care/even like/this type of environment. They are omnivores and will eat almost anything as long as it can be broken down into small particles: algae wafers, shrimp pellets, dried worm pellets. Of course, living things like Walter worms and even small fish are on their menu. I dislike the way some aquarists starve them into going crazy after a live goldfish, for example. They will wear themselves out trying to catch a live fish and then can't eat easily. They have to break it apart tiny piece by tiny piece and sometimes drag it into a hide or cave to rot so it is easier to eat. They don't have crushing teeth or strong jaws. If tank bred, they will almost never attempt escape, but if wild caught, they will escape every time, trying to "go back home." When one is determined to escape, I take him back "home" and release him. They are territorial and build borders between themselves and tankmates to keep the peace. Don't crowd them. I've raised these fascinating creatures for 50 years and still don't know everything about them, but the advice above might help you enjoy them even more.
Hey Kerry Chase. I have 2 Cherax Desctructor. Male and Female ofc. They cuddle alot.. but thats not the topic.. since yesterday they try to escape but i have them for almost 1year now... i asked in forums etc etc.. they said i dont have enough oxygen in my tank and they try to breath outside.... my firered shrimps do the same.. i have a good moving surface and a pump with airattachement thingy. Maybe u have an idea? I feed them protein only once in a week and as standart i go with the shrimp/crayfish sticks... they love em. So whats my Problem? I checked my Water with numerous tests and cant find any solution.
Alucard NoLifeKing They need lots of hiding places, thick substrate--sandy with potting soil bottom layer, and calcium supplements. They prefer moving water (an in-tank submersible pump is ideal). They breathe with gills underneath the carapace so will do fine with proper aeration and lots of plants.
@@rytispetrikenas1021As long as the crayfish and the pleco are about the same size, they will get along fine. I've had this combination many times without difficulty. Remember to keep a glass top on the aquarium so the crayfish can't escape. They WILL try!
I'll add this: I've kept crayfish in community tanks for many years. I start them in the tank as hatchlings whenever possible, that way, they home in on the tank and don't usually feel compelled to leave. I keep them well fed on algae wafers, shrimp pellets, and dried worm tablets as well as the occasional boiled or crushed vegetable or salad shrimp. They have never bothered the community fish in the tank when well fed. The bigger the tank, the better. I use anything above 40 gallons with best results.
@ЯНАО АККР Have you ever seen anyone removing waste from the creek and lake beds? No, you haven't. You don't have to remove the waste. Bacteria, plants, and other small creatures will do that for you. An occasional water change is sufficient. (Twenty-five percent water change weekly will suffice). You may vacuum the very surface for aesthetic reasons if you want but the "waste" is an essential part of the biological cycle of life. Keeping a glass lid on the tank will help keep them from escaping but will cause the CO2 levels to increase: great for the plants, not so much for the animals. This requires you use an aeration pump to increase oxygen and keep the water moving around.
@@thebrutalgarden6842 If you have a large enough tank you can build a turtle ledge, but they don't require it since they don't breathe air. They have gills under their carapace which MUST remain wet at all times. If they escape, put them in a large lid with some water to re-wet the gills and watch them for a while before you dump them back in the tank, as they may die d/t dried out gills.
Hi I know you said the crayfish would burrow. I live in the UK do they do that so frequently and in different places all the time? Otherwise surely that depth of sand would become anaerobic and cause toxicity?
Don't need a heater for these Cherax quadricarinatus crayfish. Also I would be wary of using bogwood as it acidifies the water. Clay pots and fake ones are better as will retain the ph in the higher end which Crays need for successful molts, unless you are going to use additives in the tank to raise ph such as iodine
The wood does not really lower the PH alot, tannins do. If you get a new piece of wood it will leak tannins (the stuff that makes your tea brown) and that will drastically lower the PH But if you do 2 waterchanges per week it's not a big problem, and when the wood stopts leaking tannins it's not a problem at all
Yes, as long as the cichlids are small and the crayfish are about the same size. Cichlids will eat small crayfish in a heartbeat. I keep crayfish in cichlid tanks all the time, but the cichlids are small, no larger than 4 inches long, and the crayfish are 2.5 to 4 inches in length.
No, it was just my suggestion that one might not need active filtration, but only plants. I've done it this way with some success as long as the surface area is large in proportion to the depth of the tank. I should have made that more clear. I have a large pond and of course, it doesn't have aeration and agitation, but lots and lots of algae, duckweed, lily pads, etc. But, the surface area is huge compared to the depth of the pond.
hi. i want to know if its a good idea to give the crayfish an island or any plataform that get to the surface (air), so they can lay and get a little dry once in a while? its a beautiful tank congrats greatings from mexico
They need a little island to get to the surface if the water isn't well oxygenated. I have some rocks that reach the surface in my tank, but my crayfish doesn't even use it :(
Sorry for the slow reply. Greeting from London. The crayfish will not need an island but do feel free to add one if you want. Just make sure that they cannot escape from the tank via your island :D
Let me give you some tips, because this videos is kind of misleading, if you want one, I suggest a ten gallon, but for two or more I suggest a 55 gallon or up, you don't need that much sand, just about three inches, make sure to have live plants, and some driftwood spread out for the craws to hide in, for how many craws you have, get a hide for each, Crayfish eat anything from fish, to the live plants you have, so feed it ghost shrimp, small minnows, and make sure you have a little bit of algae growth, the crayfish will feed off of it. Have an are with some gravel, so the crayfish have a balance between and and gravel, use gravel big enough so that the crayfish cannot eat it, DO NOT USE VERY SMALL GRAVEL.
I just got two crayfish for some weird reason but anyway my question is that i've ordered a tank but the tank has not arrived yet. Where should i keep my crayfish while i'm waiting for the tank to arrive? I'm putting them in two separate pot with some water to cover them up at the moment. It seems they are now being less active and are now weaker compare to when they first came in. Is there anything i can do to keep them alive while waiting for the tank?
My crayfish just hides and doesn’t eat the feeders I buy him I don’t understand what he is eating or living on tbh. How can I get him to eat?! I’ve already tried putting him alone in a container with the fish where the fish is very close to him and he ignores it
I have hundreds of little crayfish in the stream right next to my driveway. I'm thinking of catching a few and trying to raise them in an aquarium now. I'll have to figure out their exact species to determine the ideal setup for them first. That, and find a way to get rid of any parasites they may have, as they are wild.
A large percentage of crayfish suffer from "crayfish fungus" which will kill them eventually. Keep them in a tank apart from other aquatic life for a period of several weeks and let them grow out, using algae wafers, shrimp pellets, and dried worm tablets. They will eat crushed up cooked hotdogs and vegetables, but they may let them partially rot before eating them. Putting a Catappa leaf in tank (one per every 10 gallons) will help kill off the fungus and the crayfish love it. But don't worry, some of them will die anyway. Never release crayfish from one site into another site. This has served to spread this lethal disease from as far away as America is from Europe. After several months of survival in a quarantine tank, it is usually safe to move them into a community tank with tank mates no larger than themselves.
You’re lucky if your crayfish prefers veggies. I find they all have different preferences and personalities. I’ve had crayfish that were shy and didn’t eat the fish, and crayfish on the other side of the spectrum who were extremely predatory tried to catch and eat fish at every opportunity.
Thanks for the tutorial pal! My mother brought home a cray fish from a pond of which they were just gonna kill all the ones in there anyways so I'm gonna make him/her a nice home, I have named them lobster as I am bad at naming.
I’m confused I bough three crayfish only around inch size I though they didn’t breed until they was large I now have over ten baby’s lol more for the puffer ayy
No, they will deteriorate over time, and they don't add the same acidity to a tank that wood does. I wouldn't be confident either about what bacteria a shed would add to a tank.
Every time i have 2 crayfish in the same tank, they will always fight and tried to kill/ eat each other when one of them are molting. And they will always escape, so i put steel bar above the aquarium.
If you decide to keep/breed our native white-clawed crayfish, (and I'm not sure how could get them legally) it could prove very useful for aiding in their conservation against the invasive american signal crayfish, and survival of crayfish plague.
I found a few things different from the research I do. The crayfish are omnivores and if you are not careful they will eat each other if you have a littler one or if you don't feed them enough. This was an awesome video!!!!!
Plecos might work. My pleco did fine with a crayfish because it has very tough skin, but if the crayfish can get under the pleco he will tear his guts out. So you might be able to use a pleco, but generally very fast and middle/high dwelling fish work best
Right-o. They are less aggressive when well fed with algae wafers, shrimp pellets, and dried worm tablets. Keeping crayfish in a community tank will work out better if they are approximately the same size as the rest of the fish in the tank. The bigger the tank the better.
Room temperature. They accept a wide range of temperatures, all the way from the 80's down to near freezing, at which point they will hibernate in the very thick substrate provided, thinking it is winter.
See my video at Kerry Chase on TH-cam. Crayfish sex in action! After what you see on this video, the female carries eggs on her abdomen until they hatch. Hatchlings are tiny, just a few mm in length, but fully functional crayfish. If you hatch them in a tank make sure there are no other fish in there because they are food for everybody.
All tanks will have both aerobes and anaerobes. In this case the crayfish will constantly dig out the substrate and keep things cycling. In my deep substrate tanks I like to use full bottom under gravel filters as well as canister filters, pre-filter sponges, and aeration.
Sand substrate is way to deep. Your going to get gas bubbles that will kill them all at once. Maybe get something that will constantly stir your substrate. Nice setup tho $
Wrong, wrong, wrong. They burrow and dig all by themselves. They practically live in mud along creek banks, and some of the creeks they live in are pretty full of rotten leaves and sticks. They dig subaquatic tunnels away from the muddy banks of streams out as far as several meters and then build a mud tower 150 mm tall for what purpose I really don't know, but I have hundreds of them on my property here in Tennessee, USA. Keep the water circulating and use an aerator. Let them stir the substrate themselves. Plants help too, since many of the rooted ones love the mucky substrates, use up excess CO2 and give off O2 as a waste. (The cycle of life, you know.) Without CO2 from the crayfish and other animal life in the tank, nothing GREEN would thrive. Plants thrive on CO2 (the GREEN gas) and animals thrive on plant waste--oxygen!
@@kerrychase4839- point proven, but I can't see 2 small crayfish burrow deep & far enough to keep all that sand stirred. It seriously takes about a week of rotting food under the sand to cause a death bubble pocket. In creeks, a gas pocket the size of a golf ball isn't going to wipe out any fish or aquatic life, but in a 55 gallon aquarium, it can in a matter of minutes. Just trying to help out. If I was this guy, I would use a stick & stir the sand atleast 3 times a week.
Crawfish are omnivores and cannibals. They will be very happy to eat small critters that they can catch, including fish, as well as each other. And of course, using some kind of clean meat that doesn't give off too much oil, you can feed them meat also. I found that ham and raw or cooked chicken gave off very little oil, and the crawfish love eating those.
I've read some of the comments below and find them misleading. Young man, the amount of sand is perfect. Crayfish LOVE to burrow. I might even add a little layer of muddy substrate under the sand, although it makes it more difficult to maintain aesthetically acceptable water quality. Trust me, the crayfish won't care. Keep the water clean enough to see through, but not crystalline; they don't live in nature that way. Add a tablet of calcium/magnesium every month or so to make it easier for them to molt. They live where there is a lot of dead wood and tannins in the water and don't care/even like/this type of environment. They are omnivores and will eat almost anything as long as it can be broken down into small particles: algae wafers, shrimp pellets, dried worm pellets. Of course, living things like Walter worms and even small fish are on their menu. I dislike the way some aquarists starve them into going crazy after a live goldfish, for example. They will wear themselves out trying to catch a live fish and then can't eat easily. They have to break it apart tiny piece by tiny piece and sometimes drag it into a hide or cave to rot so it is easier to eat. They don't have crushing teeth or strong jaws. If tank bred, they will almost never attempt escape, but if wild caught, they will escape every time, trying to "go back home." When one is determined to escape, I take him back "home" and release him. They are territorial and build borders between themselves and tankmates to keep the peace. Don't crowd them. I've raised these fascinating creatures for 50 years and still don't know everything about them, but the advice above might help you enjoy them even more.
Hey Kerry Chase. I have 2 Cherax Desctructor. Male and Female ofc. They cuddle alot.. but thats not the topic.. since yesterday they try to escape but i have them for almost 1year now... i asked in forums etc etc.. they said i dont have enough oxygen in my tank and they try to breath outside.... my firered shrimps do the same.. i have a good moving surface and a pump with airattachement thingy. Maybe u have an idea? I feed them protein only once in a week and as standart i go with the shrimp/crayfish sticks... they love em. So whats my Problem? I checked my Water with numerous tests and cant find any solution.
Alucard NoLifeKing They need lots of hiding places, thick substrate--sandy with potting soil bottom layer, and calcium supplements. They prefer moving water (an in-tank submersible pump is ideal). They breathe with gills underneath the carapace so will do fine with proper aeration and lots of plants.
Okay thank you for your advice! I keep you updated.
hi i want keep crayfish red claw and ancistrus dolihopterus, plekostomus or thei getalong or crayfish wil eat them thank
@@rytispetrikenas1021As long as the crayfish and the pleco are about the same size, they will get along fine. I've had this combination many times without difficulty. Remember to keep a glass top on the aquarium so the crayfish can't escape. They WILL try!
I'll add this: I've kept crayfish in community tanks for many years. I start them in the tank as hatchlings whenever possible, that way, they home in on the tank and don't usually feel compelled to leave. I keep them well fed on algae wafers, shrimp pellets, and dried worm tablets as well as the occasional boiled or crushed vegetable or salad shrimp. They have never bothered the community fish in the tank when well fed. The bigger the tank, the better. I use anything above 40 gallons with best results.
can i fill my tank? or do i need to make an area where they can get out of water.. like instal a turtle ledge?
How often should you feed one?
@ЯНАО АККР Have you ever seen anyone removing waste from the creek and lake beds? No, you haven't. You don't have to remove the waste. Bacteria, plants, and other small creatures will do that for you. An occasional water change is sufficient. (Twenty-five percent water change weekly will suffice). You may vacuum the very surface for aesthetic reasons if you want but the "waste" is an essential part of the biological cycle of life. Keeping a glass lid on the tank will help keep them from escaping but will cause the CO2 levels to increase: great for the plants, not so much for the animals. This requires you use an aeration pump to increase oxygen and keep the water moving around.
@@thebrutalgarden6842 If you have a large enough tank you can build a turtle ledge, but they don't require it since they don't breathe air. They have gills under their carapace which MUST remain wet at all times. If they escape, put them in a large lid with some water to re-wet the gills and watch them for a while before you dump them back in the tank, as they may die d/t dried out gills.
Hey I wanna put some plants in my aquarium but the crayfish keeps pulling them out , i wanted to ask about any plants that can survive the crayfish
Your voice is so smooth and soothing LOOOL fallin asleep
Thanks for this I'm getting this for my girls and need to know what I have to put in the tank
Fun Fact: if you boil the wood for about an hour or two, it won’t make the water yellow when you put it in.
they are omnivores not herbivores
Jonah Hauber 😂😂
They eat meat and plants. They will cannibalize each other if not properly fed.
I feed mine balogna and they are fat as pigs
If they are both..it means you can say they are omnivore.
They don’t like meat but they will eat it if they have to.
Cheers any updates in 2021 about your crayfishes?
crayfish are omnivores
aquariums design can be beautiful art, the sand level is perfect..
Hi I know you said the crayfish would burrow. I live in the UK do they do that so frequently and in different places all the time? Otherwise surely that depth of sand would become anaerobic and cause toxicity?
Can keep it in a tank without aerator ?
sir is that Natural dye of driftwood is okay for them? is it not harmful? please reply me sir
Don't need a heater for these Cherax quadricarinatus crayfish. Also I would be wary of using bogwood as it acidifies the water. Clay pots and fake ones are better as will retain the ph in the higher end which Crays need for successful molts, unless you are going to use additives in the tank to raise ph such as iodine
Thanks for advice! So far the crayfish have all shed great and I have had no issues.
crayfish
The wood does not really lower the PH alot, tannins do. If you get a new piece of wood it will leak tannins (the stuff that makes your tea brown) and that will drastically lower the PH
But if you do 2 waterchanges per week it's not a big problem, and when the wood stopts leaking tannins it's not a problem at all
My crayfish are not molting properly , I had a feeling my water ph may be the problem , what can I do to improve it safely for them ?
Add a tablet of calcium/magnesium every month or so. They need a lot of calcium to molt.
is it really cold where you live cuz in oz we dont need heater
And, would Crayfish be willing/able to eat small pieces of canned chicken, if that's all I currently have for it's protien?
4:40 little man just bossed the bigger guy out of that hiding spot lol
Kindly tell Crayfish can live without air pump, it's tank mates fishes and its life span.
Thanks
Can we leave a cray fish in a tank of cichlids ?
Yes, as long as the cichlids are small and the crayfish are about the same size. Cichlids will eat small crayfish in a heartbeat. I keep crayfish in cichlid tanks all the time, but the cichlids are small, no larger than 4 inches long, and the crayfish are 2.5 to 4 inches in length.
nice tank ! awesome !! greetings from France
i wonder how do add oxygene in it without any pump ?
Plants
and where ? i dont see them in that tank
OK, you missed the fact he sectioned off a small refugium on the right side of the tank for filtration and pump.
oh ok..i see the filtration ..but no plants ;)
No, it was just my suggestion that one might not need active filtration, but only plants. I've done it this way with some success as long as the surface area is large in proportion to the depth of the tank. I should have made that more clear. I have a large pond and of course, it doesn't have aeration and agitation, but lots and lots of algae, duckweed, lily pads, etc. But, the surface area is huge compared to the depth of the pond.
What is the proper water height in a crayfish aquarium?
hi. i want to know if its a good idea to give the crayfish an island or any plataform that get to the surface (air), so they can lay and get a little dry once in a while? its a beautiful tank congrats greatings from mexico
They need a little island to get to the surface if the water isn't well oxygenated. I have some rocks that reach the surface in my tank, but my crayfish doesn't even use it :(
Swamp Gas crawfish
Elsanto Visonte crawfish
Sorry for the slow reply. Greeting from London.
The crayfish will not need an island but do feel free to add one if you want. Just make sure that they cannot escape from the tank via your island :D
RedsBassSpecks Flounder it's the same shit bro
I'm thinking about starting a crayfish tank. Thanx for this info.
Let me give you some tips, because this videos is kind of misleading, if you want one, I suggest a ten gallon, but for two or more I suggest a 55 gallon or up, you don't need that much sand, just about three inches, make sure to have live plants, and some driftwood spread out for the craws to hide in, for how many craws you have, get a hide for each, Crayfish eat anything from fish, to the live plants you have, so feed it ghost shrimp, small minnows, and make sure you have a little bit of algae growth, the crayfish will feed off of it. Have an are with some gravel, so the crayfish have a balance between and and gravel, use gravel big enough so that the crayfish cannot eat it, DO NOT USE VERY SMALL GRAVEL.
What’s the best filter I should get for my crayfish tank
Could you please post your water parameters? Thank you
How long did you wait before adding crayfish? Sorry if I missed it in the video.
Enjoyed this vid. Where can I find these clear seal tanks.
Edit- I found it in the description.
The website won’t let me add anything to the basket how do you do it?
Hw many gallons does it have to be
how do you handle calcium and iodine needs? mind you I have mine with fish
Do crawfish eat detritus worms?
Sir, Do i need to put the airpump oxygen or just a natural one?
I just got two crayfish for some weird reason but anyway my question is that i've ordered a tank but the tank has not arrived yet. Where should i keep my crayfish while i'm waiting for the tank to arrive? I'm putting them in two separate pot with some water to cover them up at the moment. It seems they are now being less active and are now weaker compare to when they first came in. Is there anything i can do to keep them alive while waiting for the tank?
RIP. those crayfish long dead now from lack of a Nitrogen Cycle. neither in the buckets nor in a fresh still sterile tank.
my crayfish has just climbed out my tank and i found it dead on the floor dried up. :(
That's sad. Yesterday was my birthday and my pleco and dwarf puffer were dead 😭
that sucks, the other day when i was doing a water change one of my fish got sucked up the hose and died.
Thats horrible. Last night, my cat caught my crayfish and ate it.
Jeffrey Domingo how did your cat catch your crayfish
she went on top of the tank and pawed the crayfish while it was on top of a rock near the top.
How often should u feed one?
Can i add tree?
My crayfish just hides and doesn’t eat the feeders I buy him I don’t understand what he is eating or living on tbh. How can I get him to eat?! I’ve already tried putting him alone in a container with the fish where the fish is very close to him and he ignores it
I have hundreds of little crayfish in the stream right next to my driveway. I'm thinking of catching a few and trying to raise them in an aquarium now. I'll have to figure out their exact species to determine the ideal setup for them first. That, and find a way to get rid of any parasites they may have, as they are wild.
A large percentage of crayfish suffer from "crayfish fungus" which will kill them eventually. Keep them in a tank apart from other aquatic life for a period of several weeks and let them grow out, using algae wafers, shrimp pellets, and dried worm tablets. They will eat crushed up cooked hotdogs and vegetables, but they may let them partially rot before eating them. Putting a Catappa leaf in tank (one per every 10 gallons) will help kill off the fungus and the crayfish love it. But don't worry, some of them will die anyway. Never release crayfish from one site into another site. This has served to spread this lethal disease from as far away as America is from Europe. After several months of survival in a quarantine tank, it is usually safe to move them into a community tank with tank mates no larger than themselves.
You’re lucky if your crayfish prefers veggies. I find they all have different preferences and personalities. I’ve had crayfish that were shy and didn’t eat the fish, and crayfish on the other side of the spectrum who were extremely predatory tried to catch and eat fish at every opportunity.
Are pebbles ok for substrate?
Hi! What is the size of this tank? Is this size the rule of thumb if you will have 1 male, 2 female crayfishes?
i have 4 different types of crayfish with gravel, they have made themselves at home easily with some fish added.
Thanks for the tutorial pal! My mother brought home a cray fish from a pond of which they were just gonna kill all the ones in there anyways so I'm gonna make him/her a nice home, I have named them lobster as I am bad at naming.
My crayfish just dead... she doesn't want to eat anything after moulting... 😣
what do they eat ?
30cm Square space? So a tank which is 5cm by 6cm?? Do you mean 300sq cm?
I’m confused I bough three crayfish only around inch size
I though they didn’t breed until they was large
I now have over ten baby’s lol more for the puffer ayy
What do you feed new babies
I don't think crayfish need heaters. Or atleats most crayfish. Also can I keep a wild crayfish?
radioactive carnivorous plants I keep wild ones I caught with traps
Crawdaddies are such majestic creatures
William Margerum crawfish
Crayfish :D
You can call them all of these
lol must be a west coast thing calling them crawdads
Will deer antlers work as wood/decor?
No, they will deteriorate over time, and they don't add the same acidity to a tank that wood does. I wouldn't be confident either about what bacteria a shed would add to a tank.
Are they send in india??
Every time i have 2 crayfish in the same tank, they will always fight and tried to kill/ eat each other when one of them are molting. And they will always escape, so i put steel bar above the aquarium.
Was that a bandaid in the tank?
Never mind lol I can’t see very well. My bad
I like how you did the sand deep (taller)unlike other crayfish tanks I've seen they like to burrow....nice tank!
What if I had an aquarium with only cleaner species like clams, shrimps, crabs, and snails. I want the water to be *Crisp* .
I know that they can be in a tank with a crab and they just treat it as another crawdad and if big enough they'll eat the shrimp
i know i'm late on this video but does this aquarium set-up work with red claw/fiddler crabs??? or do i need to have flowing water
Some crabs need a section of land above the water. I would do more research in the specific needs of your crab! Sorry I can't help more
Can i use a ten gallon,pvc pipe,sand,smooth stones
No, 20 gal minimum
why on earth are you putting a heater in the tank of a creature that normally lives in cold creeks and lakes¿
hes house probs gets to cold
size of your tank?
If you decide to keep/breed our native white-clawed crayfish, (and I'm not sure how could get them legally) it could prove very useful for aiding in their conservation against the invasive american signal crayfish, and survival of crayfish plague.
Where can i get the sand u usedm
You can get white or yellow sand from aquarium stores or of ebay
P00Ki Vainglory would you link me the exact sand you bought please
where do you get your aquariums?
Pet smart or pet co but if you want a cheap one go on Craigslist
Please tell me more about crayfsh bcoz wanna buy for my son
Does crayfish need heater?
No.
You can make it like a lobster tank where make can live there
Excellent Job.Your a great educator-----Thank you very much-Bill Petillo
Is a 20 Gallon long a good size? 30in x 15in x 15
Yes.
I found a few things different from the research I do. The crayfish are omnivores and if you are not careful they will eat each other if you have a littler one or if you don't feed them enough. This was an awesome video!!!!!
Beautiful setup and cute crayfish :D
Do crayfish fight each other if we put them together???
Phuc Vo yes and they will kill each other if not enough room and if there are 2 females and 1 male.
They will if overcrowded and of the same species.
peas what and seaweed???
They like cucumbers the best and if you wash them. They wont change water quality seeing as cucumbers are like 100% water.
Food?
Can I add fish 🐟 or snail 🐌??? And if I can what kind ?????
Plecos might work. My pleco did fine with a crayfish because it has very tough skin, but if the crayfish can get under the pleco he will tear his guts out. So you might be able to use a pleco, but generally very fast and middle/high dwelling fish work best
Right-o. They are less aggressive when well fed with algae wafers, shrimp pellets, and dried worm tablets. Keeping crayfish in a community tank will work out better if they are approximately the same size as the rest of the fish in the tank. The bigger the tank the better.
Don't forget to keep the water hard as too soft a water will kill them after they moult.
Cool setup
Please tell me the proper heating level.
Room temperature. They accept a wide range of temperatures, all the way from the 80's down to near freezing, at which point they will hibernate in the very thick substrate provided, thinking it is winter.
Don't crayfish need air to breathe? In my aquarium on side is land and the other is water
Very professional video 👏🏿
is an asmr channel
When you were putting the fish inside tank it looked like you were dumping your sushi in a fish tank
You can buy crayfish online!?
Technically they are omnivores... they ate my fish. My friend had one crayfish and it ate all the Angelfish they had in a 50 gallon.
ŽÄÇHÅRŸ RØDËÑTŠ
my 1 crayfish ate all my piranhas
Don't replace your filter media!
Big question is how do they have baby’s
Trevor Holland sex.
See my video at Kerry Chase on TH-cam. Crayfish sex in action! After what you see on this video, the female carries eggs on her abdomen until they hatch. Hatchlings are tiny, just a few mm in length, but fully functional crayfish. If you hatch them in a tank make sure there are no other fish in there because they are food for everybody.
Kerry Chase cool. I have a 200g UK river biotope hehe
why do you need to add a heater to it?
Maybe to keep the water at a consistent temperature.
@@OmniversalInsect whats the best temperature? recently my baby crayfish keep die. i not sure whats the reason
@@ryansiow7459 I'm not sure search it up on google
@@OmniversalInsect ok nvm. Just today 5 dead. Ytd I count 51 now 46 left
@@ryansiow7459 wow
Can I add plants 🌱????
Always use plants. They make oxygen for the water column as well as providing some nutrition for the crayfish. You can always add more plants.
Why are crayfishes soo cute?
I gave a thumbs up because you called it a cheeky thumbs up and that made me laugh
what gallon tank is that?
The tank is a 28.1 U.S. gallon tank. I put a link in the description
Why arent you cotinue thus channel
One thing you got wrong crayfish are not herbivores they are omnivores
Awww m8! This was a gr8 "chewtorial"...
Greg Davies what is a chewtorial
Why did you add sooooo much sand? A little layer is enough. If provided a good big hideout they won't dig at all
Crayfish naturally have lots of deep sand in their habitat and will dig very deep if you allow them. Mine can easily dig to the bottom of the tank
The Urban Researcher but arent you afraid of the sand becoming anaerobic?
All tanks will have both aerobes and anaerobes. In this case the crayfish will constantly dig out the substrate and keep things cycling. In my deep substrate tanks I like to use full bottom under gravel filters as well as canister filters, pre-filter sponges, and aeration.
Sand substrate is way to deep. Your going to get gas bubbles that will kill them all at once. Maybe get something that will constantly stir your substrate. Nice setup tho $
Wrong, wrong, wrong. They burrow and dig all by themselves. They practically live in mud along creek banks, and some of the creeks they live in are pretty full of rotten leaves and sticks. They dig subaquatic tunnels away from the muddy banks of streams out as far as several meters and then build a mud tower 150 mm tall for what purpose I really don't know, but I have hundreds of them on my property here in Tennessee, USA. Keep the water circulating and use an aerator. Let them stir the substrate themselves. Plants help too, since many of the rooted ones love the mucky substrates, use up excess CO2 and give off O2 as a waste. (The cycle of life, you know.) Without CO2 from the crayfish and other animal life in the tank, nothing GREEN would thrive. Plants thrive on CO2 (the GREEN gas) and animals thrive on plant waste--oxygen!
@@kerrychase4839- point proven, but I can't see 2 small crayfish burrow deep & far enough to keep all that sand stirred. It seriously takes about a week of rotting food under the sand to cause a death bubble pocket. In creeks, a gas pocket the size of a golf ball isn't going to wipe out any fish or aquatic life, but in a 55 gallon aquarium, it can in a matter of minutes. Just trying to help out. If I was this guy, I would use a stick & stir the sand atleast 3 times a week.
Crawfish are omnivores and cannibals. They will be very happy to eat small critters that they can catch, including fish, as well as each other.
And of course, using some kind of clean meat that doesn't give off too much oil, you can feed them meat also. I found that ham and raw or cooked chicken gave off very little oil, and the crawfish love eating those.
Carrots are great for crawfish
There super protective of themselves
Me, a British citizen from Cornwall, hears a fish business I’ve never heard of in the place never heard of 😶🧜🏼♀️
Edit: me finds out it’s closed ☠️
No lights
Thankyou so much for sharing your knowledge..