One thing to note is the temperature does have a big impact on the sex of the baby shrimp. One study found they are 50/50 male/female at 23°C. 3° hotter resulted in 80% males and 3° lower resulted in 80% female. Temperature also had an impact on how fast they hatch but it wasn't as significant. So ideally I would keep them at 23°C or lower to get more females and grow the colony faster (plus the females are nicer!)
That would be very interesting to try at home. I've recently set up new tanks with no heaters. My original tank has been 78 F since i put it together over a year ago. I just got my first buried female in the new tank with no heater, that stays 66-68 from room temp. Very interested to see my colony grow and see if I notice what was found in those studies is true. Thanks for the info, got myself a new side quest!
@@Gelapeno I breed and sell several colors of neos locally and I can at least anecdotally confirm that I was getting quite a bit more males than females in one tank that was at 76-78 degrees. My other tanks on a rack in a cooler room (water temps around 74°) have more of an even split I do think at 66-68 you'll see decreased egg counts and significantly slower growth but it would be interesting nonetheless
Aw man, I was hoping to get a bunch of shrimp breeding in my tropical community tank, but if ~80% of the babies are male seems like the babies'll probably get munched on before they can make more
I started out with 8 halocaridina rubra and within a couple of years, I literally had thousands! Put them in a tank with a deep coral-based gravel bed and left them alone, other than giving them a toothpick-amount of spirulina powder. Once the numbers were up, they were much livelier, fed better and much more sociable with each other. At one point, when I had too many for the tank, I had to slowly acclimatize them to fresh-water from the brackish water that they breed in, because I didn’t have any more tanks to expand their living environment. They stopped breeding entirely, in fresh-water. I then converted them back to brackish-water, as I prepared to sell them and sold every last one of them, including bonus packs of babies, over the next 6 months, at a price that rivaled the stores in my country and made myself a fair amount of money. That money is saved, so that in future, if I find them in my new country, I can afford a brand new tank and any necessary equipment, in order to set up a new breeding system again.
i can confirm: shrimp LOVE flow. in my small 7 gal tank, i m using a patmini pump with modified sponges to it and it blows. you can see all the plants waving in the flow and its pretty strong current, so much so that at first i thought it might be too much. but turned out, they love that. sometimes on certain times of the day, they literally gather up, and then climbing up the glass in a line as if they wait for the roller coaster up until they are directly in front of the pump and then they let go and got blown away around the tank and 10 seconds later they are right at it again to get blown away. its kind of bizarre but they keep doing that.
I had minimal aeration in my tank when I started and I rarely saw my shrimp. Now that I added an airstone for something else they are out and about a lot more. I think it is a combination of more oxygen and flow, like the rocky streams they are found in the wild.
For me, I believe that this video was the best I have ever watched as yours. I enjoy the shrimp and you hit all the most information that does make keeping fish simple 👌
honestly love this video and the fact you are correcting information you previously put out there. you dont see people update users on their changed opinions in the freshwater space. see it alot in reefing due to the rapid advancement. but then you have really great aquarists like father fish who cant get his head around anything new and doesnt change his opinion on anything and his way is the only way. you are always updating people one what you learn and sharing your experiences. as for flow they definitely appreciate streamlike flow but do not like turbulence which many people dont differentiate. i didnt until i settled in to reefing. the turblance will pin baby shimp in pockets that dont provide for their needs and just generally bashes them in whirlpools. consistent flow is great though. and the whole thing about neglecting them is the best advice i did end up down to next to no shrimp i only feed if i want to bring them out for grading. i dont do water changes i just top off with RODI. keep making this video as each one is slightly different and demonstrates your growth as well as the growth in the hobby
The golden information here that everyone should stick to is that don't ever make and noticable change, whatever the change you want to do make it in very slow rate, let's say if you wakeup and found the heater is off and temperature is 12 degree, don't freak out, raise the temperature to the normal temperature in 3 or 4 days not in 3 or 4 hours. Every change make it in very slow rate ever if you are moving from the worst conduction to the optimal conduction, because the optimal 1st rule is the change rate
I found this video very useful and informative. I do want to mention the pH scale and how you mentioned the dissolving of the crushed coral is backwards. Otherwise I've learned my tap water will be perfect for water hardness
So, I have lots of chickens and as a result, many egg shells... Would egg shells do a similar job to crush coral? I'm guessing it's best to bake the shells first to make sure any microbes on them are neutralized.
I started with 7, now I have a colony of I don't know how much. I even moved them around when I rescaped my tank, they are super hardy. Those that are not coloring up well I feed them to my saltwater puffer.
I have a 125 litre tank in Scotland, it is very soft water here, almost like pure water. I bought 25 red cherry shrimp on Tuesday last week, I think I got 27 or 28 and added them to my tank with platys, corys, cardinal tetras and a honey gourami. After 1 day I added a teaspoon of calcium carbonate that I dissolved in a glass of water first, it turned the tank to like watery milk looking for a few hours but the shrimp seemed to settle better after it. It's been 10 days i've had them now and they mostly stay inside my java moss, I counted about 12 in there 2 days ago and I don't see them out much, occasionally I see 1 or 2 on wood or around the filter but half or most have survived at least 10 days so far which is a good sign. I haven't seen any dead ones either so most if not all might still be alive. I feel like they are maybe more hardy than people think. I am interested to see how they deal with water changes and stuff though, as I do 50% water changes and they are pretty hectic as I refill with a hose like blasting water on top and the temperature may change a couple of degrees.
Yeah like this guy is basically an expert doing education on breeding on a TH-cam channel with hundreds of thousands on subscribed, years of experience, as if he doesnt know that?
The “drip acclimation” method is the way I’ve always acclimated my more delicate freshwater species as well as all my saltwater fish and invertebrates, sometimes over a 2 - 3 hour period. The rule of thumb that has worked well is to double/triple the amount of the original water they’re in (in the acclimation bucket.) I’ve never lost an animal to shock or disease related to acclimation.
You should watch prime time aquatics explanation on why drip acclimation can be a bad idea, particularly if they’ve been shipped to you. Basically when you open the bag it releases built up carbonic acid that was lowering the PH of the water in the bag and reducing the toxicity of the ammonia present. When you release that gas, the PH of the water will rise and the ammonia will reach peak toxicity. I don’t know about shrimp specifically but plop and drop is definitely better for most fish.
It might just be me, but I prefer there not to be music playing when you're speaking. Or maybe just turn down the volume on the music a bit? Otherwise, it's another great video, thank you!
Don’t tie a knot in the airline hose in order to control the flow rate! It can come undone while you aren’t watching it and flood/drain any tank you are using it with! You don’t want your shrimp in a big puddle on the floor! Buy a small plastic/metal adjustable valve to put in the end of your air hose and play it safe. They are very cheap and I keep a box full of miscellaneous pieces that I may need, on-hand. It is a wise investment.
Also very handy are various sizes of bulldog clips, in order to clip your hose to the side of the tank or holding container where your fish or shrimp are waiting. It is so easy for the hose to drop while you anre not watching and again you get a big puddle where it falls.
@KeepingFishSimple do you ever use bacterAE, Nick? When you said "it's not about growing shrimp its about growing biofilm" it made me think bacterAE would be an almost essential addition. Great video btw mate! I've been a subscriber for a while and love the content you put out!
Great advice! I would also like to add: Unless u have decent equipment. Its all come down to luck with ur water, i had very little success with neocaridina with the water in my area. Even the shrimps in my local fish store are dying every now and then. Funnily enough, caridina are more comfortable to our water despite they are harder to keep than neocaridina. Also, the shrimps stock u buy is one of the factor to success, if they are bred around ur area, then u are more likely to have success in breeding them
Agreed, my water is way too hard and I have no RO system, so in my 3 gallon cube I put about 30% tap water and 70% distilled. I do no changes and top off with distilled only and that is what got it going. It took me a few tries and ordering about 15 of the shrimp for there to be little babies.
@@poiipoiipoii yes they're more expensive, but you just need to buy good 2 or 3 pairs, and then, have patients, on next 4 or 5 month, you'll have at least more than 30 and from it, you're just continue to have stable colony of it. More expensive, but bring more profit 😉
I love cleaning the canister filters in my two big community tanks. (About twice a year)I have to dump them in a bucket and let the crap settle. Then I net all the shrimp that grew up in the filter housing. I have sponges on my intakes so the only way they get into the canisters is when they are tiny babies.
great video! i like how you pointed to keep things simple! i also find the less you fiddle with the shrimp tanks, the better they do! can't wait for the next video!
After 20 years of fishkeeping I think I’m finally ready to breed my stock. From watching this now I’m so excited to start. Thanks so much for your motivation 🤩🙌
Keeping it simple love it great to know anytime people talk about shrimp they always mention it’s hard to keep them you need specific substrate, thanks the for the info!!
I agree, neocaridinas do well at lower temperatures. I mean below 20°C. But for example I have a tank where there is no flow at all with lots of plants and the shrimps breed and survive even in the company of neon tetra. Anyway, good point ANYWAY, you have drawn attention to the good points of shrimp breeding.
Great vid ! I would love to see a gurami breeding vid. My gurami just breed and I have microscopic fry in with my shrimp but I'm struggling with the fry.
i bought 5 cherry shrimp and started with a 5.5 gallon and a 10 gallon. i put all 5 in the 5.5g and they blew up! i started putting them in the 10g and soon had to start a whole 38g. after 6 months there were thousands in the 38g! i didnt know what to do so i put it up on craigslist and some guy came and bout all 3 tanks for like 500$. Shrimp are so easy to breed and very worth it
I just put a heater on my shrimps and now they starting to breed like crazy and don’t do water changes offten I usaaly do them every 2 months cuz I have a lot of plants and lava rock
Thanks so much! You have saved my shrimp, before watching you videos on shrimp all my shrimp would die and I didn't know what to do but now I have all the shrimp!!
I know I'm a month late on this question but I have been hearing different things about crush coral and or cuttlebone. Which one would be recommend more to help with shrimp molting? is both an option, is one more effective? thank you!
I had red cherries and blue cherries a few years ago. They were my favourite tanks. They bred like wildfire. I could sit and watch them for hours. Sadly we can't have them here in Tasmania. Such a shame. 😔
Hey Nick amazing vid definitely gonna pick some of those beautiful shrimp up.I know you are already so busy doing your amazing work but could you make a saltwater tank.i believe it would be a good challenge since u have pretty much masterd freshwater fish.😅😊🎉🎉
Mate.. good video as always! Quick question- I’ve got 2 male amanos in an aquascaped tank.. its 7 litres roughly.. it also had 12 ramshorn snails.. but now I’ve got over 40-50 ramshorn snails at different sizes (I overfed the tank a few times hehe).. would the snails be finishing all the biofilm that’s formed daily on the rocks, wood and plants in the tank? Is daily feeding necessary in this case?
Best video I've seen on shrimp. Super straightforward. Thank you. I hope to use this information to regrow my colony as I haven't had a shrimp tank for 6 years since the big earthquake in Alaska.
There is no secret to breeding Neo's. They'll happily live and breed in temps from 15c - 30c, i keep them in tubs outside during the summer and they breed like crazy. Out of my 38 tanks, 32 of them are shrimp tanks, only 6 of them being for Neo's. You are lucky that your water parameters are naturally good for Neo's, but here in the UK, its MUCH too hard for them. You've really got to use RO and remineralise it with shrimp salt over here, and theres tons of crap in our tap water too so thats a big no-no. I mostly breed caridina though, and you're right, they do need more care, but once you get them going, they dont stop!
I would like to ask you a question, one of my red shrimp created a brown stripe on its back and has become different in its behaves, its not defending anything its like a liltle more dominant now, what does that mean, i have them for like a week right now
Does each tank have its own heater, since you have different temperatures? Or you flow warm water from top to bottom so it cools off in the lower bassins?
At 5:35 there is a shot of a yellow neocardinia next to, what appears to be, an Anemone. How is this made to happen? Please! Is there such a thing as a freshwater Anemone?
I have noticed that my neos in my pond and cold water tanks grow bigger than in my heated tanks, don't know if that's a thing but it's something I've noticed 🤔 I'm in the Northern rivers and our water is a little softer than Brisbane but they still breed like roaches 😂
Food, light and temperature is important..I have hundreds in my community tanks and there numbers co trolled by certain fish species...(Additionally maybe give the shrimps some entertainment..they are not brainless beings and are effective towards humans interaction like any other animal..but we tent to ignore them due their size 🙄.).I watched cherry shrimps countless times using a floating plant like a parachute to get back down to the bottom.I guess no one here knows or ever witnesses that because they pay no attention ....😂
You may never read this, but i just had the craziest thing happen. I was trying to breed 2 bettas according to your video. The male never built a bubble nest. Then, i read somewhere on line that some males won't build the nest until the female is released into the tank with him. Sooo, i released the female into the tank with the male. She proceeded to beat the crap out of him. She pinned him to the bottom of the tank and chewed his fins mercilessly. Damn, i thought my first marraige was rough.😅 i got her out of the tank, and the male is recouping. The poor guy! Haha
20 SHRIMP FOR 50 DOLLARS, That's a steal! Here in Texas, each Cherry shrimp goes for about $8-10 (U.S. Dollar) on neocaridna and about $12-16 per carodina. If you can get Neos on Sale, MAYBE $6-8 each, and thats a MAYBE if you catch them in time before Christmas.
Great video Actually, I’m learning to breed crawfish, but I have a Fahaka baby puffer So I want to breed crawfish later an start with red shrimp Great video bro Fahaka likes to grub on
One thing to note is the temperature does have a big impact on the sex of the baby shrimp. One study found they are 50/50 male/female at 23°C. 3° hotter resulted in 80% males and 3° lower resulted in 80% female. Temperature also had an impact on how fast they hatch but it wasn't as significant. So ideally I would keep them at 23°C or lower to get more females and grow the colony faster (plus the females are nicer!)
Temperature didn't really affected much in my experience, I'm in a tropical climate in Singapore where the temperature is 28-30°c in tanks
That would be very interesting to try at home. I've recently set up new tanks with no heaters. My original tank has been 78 F since i put it together over a year ago. I just got my first buried female in the new tank with no heater, that stays 66-68 from room temp. Very interested to see my colony grow and see if I notice what was found in those studies is true. Thanks for the info, got myself a new side quest!
@@Gelapeno I breed and sell several colors of neos locally and I can at least anecdotally confirm that I was getting quite a bit more males than females in one tank that was at 76-78 degrees. My other tanks on a rack in a cooler room (water temps around 74°) have more of an even split
I do think at 66-68 you'll see decreased egg counts and significantly slower growth but it would be interesting nonetheless
I second this. in my community tank st 78F most if not ALL the babies came out as male
Aw man, I was hoping to get a bunch of shrimp breeding in my tropical community tank, but if ~80% of the babies are male seems like the babies'll probably get munched on before they can make more
I started out with 8 halocaridina rubra and within a couple of years, I literally had thousands! Put them in a tank with a deep coral-based gravel bed and left them alone, other than giving them a toothpick-amount of spirulina powder. Once the numbers were up, they were much livelier, fed better and much more sociable with each other. At one point, when I had too many for the tank, I had to slowly acclimatize them to fresh-water from the brackish water that they breed in, because I didn’t have any more tanks to expand their living environment. They stopped breeding entirely, in fresh-water. I then converted them back to brackish-water, as I prepared to sell them and sold every last one of them, including bonus packs of babies, over the next 6 months, at a price that rivaled the stores in my country and made myself a fair amount of money. That money is saved, so that in future, if I find them in my new country, I can afford a brand new tank and any necessary equipment, in order to set up a new breeding system again.
i can confirm: shrimp LOVE flow. in my small 7 gal tank, i m using a patmini pump with modified sponges to it and it blows. you can see all the plants waving in the flow and its pretty strong current, so much so that at first i thought it might be too much.
but turned out, they love that. sometimes on certain times of the day, they literally gather up, and then climbing up the glass in a line as if they wait for the roller coaster up until they are directly in front of the pump and then they let go and got blown away around the tank and 10 seconds later they are right at it again to get blown away. its kind of bizarre but they keep doing that.
Same here! My shrimp love playing in the strong currents. Plus, they will naturally be stronger and produce stronger offspring. 💪🏼🦐
I had minimal aeration in my tank when I started and I rarely saw my shrimp. Now that I added an airstone for something else they are out and about a lot more. I think it is a combination of more oxygen and flow, like the rocky streams they are found in the wild.
My amano shrimp love to dive into the bubbles and they swim down to the bottom and do it again and again.
For me, I believe that this video was the best I have ever watched as yours. I enjoy the shrimp and you hit all the most information that does make keeping fish simple 👌
honestly love this video and the fact you are correcting information you previously put out there. you dont see people update users on their changed opinions in the freshwater space. see it alot in reefing due to the rapid advancement. but then you have really great aquarists like father fish who cant get his head around anything new and doesnt change his opinion on anything and his way is the only way. you are always updating people one what you learn and sharing your experiences. as for flow they definitely appreciate streamlike flow but do not like turbulence which many people dont differentiate. i didnt until i settled in to reefing. the turblance will pin baby shimp in pockets that dont provide for their needs and just generally bashes them in whirlpools. consistent flow is great though.
and the whole thing about neglecting them is the best advice i did end up down to next to no shrimp i only feed if i want to bring them out for grading. i dont do water changes i just top off with RODI. keep making this video as each one is slightly different and demonstrates your growth as well as the growth in the hobby
what are those pretty plants that look like coral? or little anemones or worms?
Its like every time I get something new in the fishroom you seem to do a relevant video 😂 thank you!
The golden information here that everyone should stick to is that don't ever make and noticable change, whatever the change you want to do make it in very slow rate, let's say if you wakeup and found the heater is off and temperature is 12 degree, don't freak out, raise the temperature to the normal temperature in 3 or 4 days not in 3 or 4 hours.
Every change make it in very slow rate ever if you are moving from the worst conduction to the optimal conduction, because the optimal 1st rule is the change rate
Thanks for your videos. They're the best I've come across. Good luck and I look forward to your new works.
Do you mind sharing your water parameters of one of your shrimp tanks for reference pls. Like ph, gh, kh, tds... thanks Doug
I found this video very useful and informative. I do want to mention the pH scale and how you mentioned the dissolving of the crushed coral is backwards. Otherwise I've learned my tap water will be perfect for water hardness
So, I have lots of chickens and as a result, many egg shells... Would egg shells do a similar job to crush coral? I'm guessing it's best to bake the shells first to make sure any microbes on them are neutralized.
Yes, the shells are mostly calcium and lots of people use crushed egg shells for buffering.
Make sure you rinse the shells thoroughly before baking.
I started with 7, now I have a colony of I don't know how much. I even moved them around when I rescaped my tank, they are super hardy. Those that are not coloring up well I feed them to my saltwater puffer.
What are those tendrils at 5:03? Is that some type of macroalgae? Is that a saltwater tank?
When can we get the shrimp colony in a jar update ??LOVE UR VIDS ❤❤
I have a 125 litre tank in Scotland, it is very soft water here, almost like pure water. I bought 25 red cherry shrimp on Tuesday last week, I think I got 27 or 28 and added them to my tank with platys, corys, cardinal tetras and a honey gourami.
After 1 day I added a teaspoon of calcium carbonate that I dissolved in a glass of water first, it turned the tank to like watery milk looking for a few hours but the shrimp seemed to settle better after it. It's been 10 days i've had them now and they mostly stay inside my java moss, I counted about 12 in there 2 days ago and I don't see them out much, occasionally I see 1 or 2 on wood or around the filter but half or most have survived at least 10 days so far which is a good sign. I haven't seen any dead ones either so most if not all might still be alive.
I feel like they are maybe more hardy than people think. I am interested to see how they deal with water changes and stuff though, as I do 50% water changes and they are pretty hectic as I refill with a hose like blasting water on top and the temperature may change a couple of degrees.
Nick you'll find in your mixed colour breeding tank the colours will start to dull down and eventually they'll revert back to wild colouration.
Not necessarily, it depends on how related the source colors are
I'm sure after a year of breeding he still needed you to come along and tell him that.
Yeah like this guy is basically an expert doing education on breeding on a TH-cam channel with hundreds of thousands on subscribed, years of experience, as if he doesnt know that?
The “drip acclimation” method is the way I’ve always acclimated my more delicate freshwater species as well as all my saltwater fish and invertebrates, sometimes over a 2 - 3 hour period. The rule of thumb that has worked well is to double/triple the amount of the original water they’re in (in the acclimation bucket.) I’ve never lost an animal to shock or disease related to acclimation.
I do the same, and have had great success.
You should watch prime time aquatics explanation on why drip acclimation can be a bad idea, particularly if they’ve been shipped to you.
Basically when you open the bag it releases built up carbonic acid that was lowering the PH of the water in the bag and reducing the toxicity of the ammonia present.
When you release that gas, the PH of the water will rise and the ammonia will reach peak toxicity. I don’t know about shrimp specifically but plop and drop is definitely better for most fish.
It might just be me, but I prefer there not to be music playing when you're speaking. Or maybe just turn down the volume on the music a bit? Otherwise, it's another great video, thank you!
It's just you, I love the music and I don't find it distracting. It might just be me,
I like the music it’s in the background and is calming
Don’t tie a knot in the airline hose in order to control the flow rate! It can come undone while you aren’t watching it and flood/drain any tank you are using it with! You don’t want your shrimp in a big puddle on the floor! Buy a small plastic/metal adjustable valve to put in the end of your air hose and play it safe. They are very cheap and I keep a box full of miscellaneous pieces that I may need, on-hand. It is a wise investment.
Also very handy are various sizes of bulldog clips, in order to clip your hose to the side of the tank or holding container where your fish or shrimp are waiting. It is so easy for the hose to drop while you anre not watching and again you get a big puddle where it falls.
@KeepingFishSimple do you ever use bacterAE, Nick? When you said "it's not about growing shrimp its about growing biofilm" it made me think bacterAE would be an almost essential addition.
Great video btw mate! I've been a subscriber for a while and love the content you put out!
If You have a soft water, You need to find a way to increase hardness by adding minerals.
I've found hundreds of baby shrimp in all my cannister filters and they were quite happy
Great advice! I would also like to add:
Unless u have decent equipment. Its all come down to luck with ur water, i had very little success with neocaridina with the water in my area. Even the shrimps in my local fish store are dying every now and then. Funnily enough, caridina are more comfortable to our water despite they are harder to keep than neocaridina.
Also, the shrimps stock u buy is one of the factor to success, if they are bred around ur area, then u are more likely to have success in breeding them
Agreed, my water is way too hard and I have no RO system, so in my 3 gallon cube I put about 30% tap water and 70% distilled. I do no changes and top off with distilled only and that is what got it going. It took me a few tries and ordering about 15 of the shrimp for there to be little babies.
You're lucky then, have water source which suitable with crystal shrimps variants
@@Cleeon kinda, but caridina are alot more expensive in my country, Its about x6 to x10 times of the price of a red cherry shrimp normally
@@poiipoiipoii yes they're more expensive, but you just need to buy good 2 or 3 pairs, and then, have patients, on next 4 or 5 month, you'll have at least more than 30 and from it, you're just continue to have stable colony of it.
More expensive, but bring more profit 😉
I love cleaning the canister filters in my two big community tanks. (About twice a year)I have to dump them in a bucket and let the crap settle. Then I net all the shrimp that grew up in the filter housing. I have sponges on my intakes so the only way they get into the canisters is when they are tiny babies.
great video! i like how you pointed to keep things simple! i also find the less you fiddle with the shrimp tanks, the better they do! can't wait for the next video!
After 20 years of fishkeeping I think I’m finally ready to breed my stock. From watching this now I’m so excited to start. Thanks so much for your motivation 🤩🙌
Keeping it simple love it great to know anytime people talk about shrimp they always mention it’s hard to keep them you need specific substrate, thanks the for the info!!
I agree, neocaridinas do well at lower temperatures. I mean below 20°C. But for example I have a tank where there is no flow at all with lots of plants and the shrimps breed and survive even in the company of neon tetra. Anyway, good point ANYWAY, you have drawn attention to the good points of shrimp breeding.
Can they go colder? Say 10c?
@@scottsolar5884 I don't think so, it's too cold. But I've never tried it.
Great vid ! I would love to see a gurami breeding vid. My gurami just breed and I have microscopic fry in with my shrimp but I'm struggling with the fry.
i bought 5 cherry shrimp and started with a 5.5 gallon and a 10 gallon. i put all 5 in the 5.5g and they blew up! i started putting them in the 10g and soon had to start a whole 38g. after 6 months there were thousands in the 38g! i didnt know what to do so i put it up on craigslist and some guy came and bout all 3 tanks for like 500$. Shrimp are so easy to breed and very worth it
great video im struggling to increase my colony, much thanks from Canada
I just put a heater on my shrimps and now they starting to breed like crazy and don’t do water changes offten I usaaly do them every 2 months cuz I have a lot of plants and lava rock
Thanks so much! You have saved my shrimp, before watching you videos on shrimp all my shrimp would die and I didn't know what to do but now I have all the shrimp!!
I know I'm a month late on this question but I have been hearing different things about crush coral and or cuttlebone. Which one would be recommend more to help with shrimp molting? is both an option, is one more effective?
thank you!
Very Useful! Im breeding cherry shrimp right now as im starting a business!
So many shrimp! Ive got at least 4berried females right now and cant wait for babies.
I had red cherries and blue cherries a few years ago. They were my favourite tanks. They bred like wildfire. I could sit and watch them for hours. Sadly we can't have them here in Tasmania. Such a shame. 😔
Because of local laws?
Must be 🤷🏼♀️
What do you guys think I should get based off of my tanks rn?
Can we get a update on the zebs pls😊
@keepingfishsimple You said "you're not actually trying to breed shrimp, you're trying to grow bio-film." What is the best way to grow bio-film?
Hey Nick amazing vid definitely gonna pick some of those beautiful shrimp up.I know you are already so busy doing your amazing work but could you make a saltwater tank.i believe it would be a good challenge since u have pretty much masterd freshwater fish.😅😊🎉🎉
The way you care for your shrimp is truly commendable. Great tips👌
Do you think I cab make a little snowball shrimp colony in a 5.5
Little random, but you should get honey gouramis. I only have one but he is so cool.
I have about 100 snowballs in a 5g tank. i am hoping to get them to about 2-300 like in my other neo 5g tanks.
What is the plant that is on the crushed coral that the yellow shrimp are feeding around?
Mate.. good video as always!
Quick question- I’ve got 2 male amanos in an aquascaped tank.. its 7 litres roughly.. it also had 12 ramshorn snails.. but now I’ve got over 40-50 ramshorn snails at different sizes (I overfed the tank a few times hehe).. would the snails be finishing all the biofilm that’s formed daily on the rocks, wood and plants in the tank?
Is daily feeding necessary in this case?
First get a way bigger tank your stock is way too many for 7 liters
They look delicious
What is the growth on the crushed coral at 6:45?
what is your kh, gh, and ph levels? im having a hard time and i think its my water.
What size of aquariums are in ur fish room ?
It's true. People overcomplicate everything about keeping and breeding shrimp.
Had no idea on the coral in tanks.. I had coral in my tank cuase it looked good and theres a lot nearby..
I had a look at my 5 cherry shrimp and they've produced 1 offspring how do I get them to breed more
Best video I've seen on shrimp. Super straightforward. Thank you. I hope to use this information to regrow my colony as I haven't had a shrimp tank for 6 years since the big earthquake in Alaska.
There is no secret to breeding Neo's. They'll happily live and breed in temps from 15c - 30c, i keep them in tubs outside during the summer and they breed like crazy. Out of my 38 tanks, 32 of them are shrimp tanks, only 6 of them being for Neo's. You are lucky that your water parameters are naturally good for Neo's, but here in the UK, its MUCH too hard for them. You've really got to use RO and remineralise it with shrimp salt over here, and theres tons of crap in our tap water too so thats a big no-no. I mostly breed caridina though, and you're right, they do need more care, but once you get them going, they dont stop!
Awesome video, brother.🥳🥳🥳👏✌️🥳✌️👏✌️🥳✌️👏🦐🐞🦐🐞🦐🐞🦐🐞🦐🐞🦐🐞🦐🐞🦐🐞
I started with 4 blue dreams, never lost 1, now have thousands
I would like to ask you a question, one of my red shrimp created a brown stripe on its back and has become different in its behaves, its not defending anything its like a liltle more dominant now, what does that mean, i have them for like a week right now
ty
As shrimple as that!
What does he mean by high oxygenation? The sponge filter is enough?
Does each tank have its own heater, since you have different temperatures? Or you flow warm water from top to bottom so it cools off in the lower bassins?
At 5:35 there is a shot of a yellow neocardinia next to, what appears to be, an Anemone. How is this made to happen? Please! Is there such a thing as a freshwater Anemone?
thank you.
I know of a creek or stream with thousands of caradina shrimp here in Australia
Have you ever tried with Sulawesi shrimps? Super nice videos you made btw❤
What are the tentacles in the yellow shrimp tank?
I have noticed that my neos in my pond and cold water tanks grow bigger than in my heated tanks, don't know if that's a thing but it's something I've noticed 🤔
I'm in the Northern rivers and our water is a little softer than Brisbane but they still breed like roaches 😂
Love the vids! Keep up the great work
Bro do you need ah heater in your fish tank?
What is that coral-like moving plant in that yellow tank? Is that fake coral?
Food, light and temperature is important..I have hundreds in my community tanks and there numbers co trolled by certain fish species...(Additionally maybe give the shrimps some entertainment..they are not brainless beings and are effective towards humans interaction like any other animal..but we tent to ignore them due their size 🙄.).I watched cherry shrimps countless times using a floating plant like a parachute to get back down to the bottom.I guess no one here knows or ever witnesses that because they pay no attention ....😂
Helloo ! Do you have any problems with planaria? how do you treat possible infestations with them? how do you avoid their appearance?
Thanks😊
so many people complicate taking care of neocaridinas, tho the only thing you have to do aside from the basic setup is "leave them be"
Just looked up shrimp breeding and omg a shrimp breeder thats like 45mins away
What are the anenome looking things/creatures/objects?
Yeah I am curious about them as well, they looked like corals polyps!! 5:02 please ID for us.
You may never read this, but i just had the craziest thing happen. I was trying to breed 2 bettas according to your video. The male never built a bubble nest. Then, i read somewhere on line that some males won't build the nest until the female is released into the tank with him. Sooo, i released the female into the tank with the male. She proceeded to beat the crap out of him. She pinned him to the bottom of the tank and chewed his fins mercilessly. Damn, i thought my first marraige was rough.😅 i got her out of the tank, and the male is recouping. The poor guy! Haha
when did you start breeding and selling fish? i want to breed and sell fish for fun
Do you sell your L046 and do you have any L134?
can i keep shrimp without filter or air pump with plants ? and what should i feed them ? crushed pellets would work ?
What are all those little clear things that looks like anemone tentacles growing around the coral?
Hi, my chery shrimps have a brown eggs, its bad or good?
“These guys like it hard” 😂
What are the anemone like tentacles at 1:09 ?
what are these pink coral-like creatures growing on bags of coral bones?
Can we used Limestone instead of crushed coral, please advise
it is hard to find shrimp in nz
Can you update your shrimps breeding project?
Hi KFS, would using seashells instead of crushed coral work too? I cant find crushed coral locally.
Thanks for the tips!
Apparently yes, also cuttlefish (skeletons)✌️
Good background music chief 🔥
I guess I'm lucky I've got water comin from a natural aquifer ive never had water issues
Thanks you for being the best FY out there honest and full of advice, have great day and thanks onec agin !😊
20 SHRIMP FOR 50 DOLLARS, That's a steal! Here in Texas, each Cherry shrimp goes for about $8-10 (U.S. Dollar) on neocaridna and about $12-16 per carodina. If you can get Neos on Sale, MAYBE $6-8 each, and thats a MAYBE if you catch them in time before Christmas.
Lol in argentina we have each shrimp for about 1-2 USD
Try Aquahuna super cheap avg 3$ per shrimp
In Cali, $4 or so.
2:45 today we are going to talk about how to breed them
him: 😂
7:25 hold on a minute, how hard we talking 😮
Is there a good trick to catch the smaller shrimp to sell or give away and keep the larger ones?
Yeah secrets 🤐
Great video
Actually, I’m learning to breed crawfish, but I have a Fahaka baby puffer
So I want to breed crawfish later an start with red shrimp
Great video bro
Fahaka likes to grub on