I SEE BABIES!!!

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
THANKS TO ALL OF YOUR REPLIES!! :D


madehtsobi;2668373; said:
yeh i saw your thread before! thanks for the link!

so did all of your babies make it?

yeh too late for the gravel...lol...i seem some eggs drop from her already and im afraid if i put the gravel they will kill the eggs that dropped...=(
 
I've been busy lately but will try to write something for you shortly.

How many eggs have dropped? Those are essentially lost anyways, so I wouldn't worry too much about them.

jmartra;2664763; said:
Beautiful crayfish!!
Might be hard to believe, but this is actually a shrimp, much more closely related to feeder ghost shrimp than to any crayfish.

freshwaterfishing;2664768; said:
Congrats, i had posted a thread of mine having babies and they were the coolest thing to watch over the weeks. Make sure you have lots of stones/gravel in the tank for them to hide because they are cannibles.


Here is the thread on mine if you want ot take a look!

http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=157383
Care is going to be a lot different than that for any crayfish because the eggs will hatch into miniscule planktonic larvae that require brackish water.
 
I would take a look at this and this page.

Isolate the female in a separate breeding tank, maybe 5 or 10 gallons (smaller might be too cramped for the female and will experience quicker deterioration of water quality; the larger the aquarium, on the other hand, the harder to observe the larvae).

This should have filtration (established sponge filter would be best) until the eggs begin to darken, at which point you should switch to an airstone. Once the eggs have hatched, you should carefully return the female to the original aquarium and add marine aquarium salt until salinity in the breeding tank is 12 ppt. Some aquarists find it necessary to restrict the flow of the airstone by tying a knot in the tubing or crimping it with a heavy clip; as long as there's decent circulation and water isn't being splashed from the surface, you should be fine.

Keep temps a constant 76-80.

They should start feeding on newly-hatched brine shrimp, though I there are commercial powder foods out there which might also be suitable.

Waste should be carefully siphoned off the bottom (take care not to suck up any larvae) and the removed water replaced with water of the same salinity. Evaporation, on the other hand, should be topped off with distilled water if possible, but plain freshwater will do.

Some people choose to keep the tank light on 24 hours a day, but I'm undecided as to whether this is beneficial.
 
Sorry to hear that.

These are very sensitive to heavy metals (especially copper). Did it exhibit any symptoms of illness (inactivity, refusal to feed, opaque or whitish tissue)?
 
Veneer;2680118; said:
Sorry to hear that.

These are very sensitive to heavy metals (especially copper). Did it exhibit any symptoms of illness (inactivity, refusal to feed, opaque or whitish tissue)?


nothing...it crawled as usual just like the female. everything looked fine...

very strange....
 
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