Hop on that wagon Madness!!!madness said:Shrimp has been a huge topic on here lately, its seems to be the next big thing.![]()
I've tried raising shrimp & found out my Cichlids love them too!madness said::welcome!: Shrimp has been a huge topic on here lately, its seems to be the next big thing.![]()
Welcome...I am so excited to start with the shrimp...they are so cool...LuminousAphid said:Welcome, I am really pretty new too, so we will be learning a lot together
Yeah, I agree. Right now I only have Amano shrimp in my 20 gallon, for cleaning up algae and other waste (and they are super good at it), and then about 7 RCS in my 10 gallon tank, hopefully soon to have more of those.WAshrimp said:Welcome...I am so excited to start with the shrimp...they are so cool...LuminousAphid said:Welcome, I am really pretty new too, so we will be learning a lot together
That's not exactly the case. Certain species of shrimp, especially caridina cf. cantonensis (CRS, CBS, etc.), prefer slightly acidic water (above 6, below 7). Neocaridina can live in water in the mid to upper 6 PH range as well. I have a healthy, breeding population of RCS in a 3g tank with amazonia 2 substrate and a PH of 6.5. The important thing is to make sure your PH is stable. Keeping PH stable below 7 is a bit trickier than keeping it stable above 7 since it usually means keeping the buffering capacity of your water (KH - carbonate hardness) fairly low. This makes a tank more susceptible to PH crashing and/or swinging. PH swings are very stressful to aquaria, but a low PH in and of itself is not necessarily a problem as long as it's stable.LuminousAphid said:That's one good bit of advice, if you are planning on keeping shrimp, make sure your PH is at least above 7. If it's acidic, the water will literally eat away at their shells until they die. I think that's what happened to the first 2 amano which died