Jump to content

Chocolate Shrimp - baby coloration question


daz88

Recommended Posts

I bought 5 juvenile unsexed chocolate shrimp a few months back. Four were chocolate and one was decidingly red. I contacted the seller and she said it was ok to keep it in the tank if female but remove if male. I suspected it was female and lo and behold it was berried soon after and had a sizeable litter of offspring (maybe 15 to 20 babies). It has turned out to be a really big female (but still red).

So now there are roughly 2mm, still tiny, some are still white/clear, others are reddish and others might be reddish brown.

Should i expect any chocolate shrimp? or reds? or wild type? or a mixture? Should i remove the four chocolate adults from this tank before the babies get bigger? I think one of the four may be another female but its solid brown hence i can't see a saddle or eggs in it.

I can post some pics if needed.

Cheers,

Daz

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • HOF Member

Daz some Chocolate shrimp have Black and Blue genes and will also throw some Reds. The pale babies may be blues. However if in doubt especially if you don't know who the father is or if she was berried before you got her then take your good shrimp out and keep the mum and babies separate from your breeders until you can see some colour and then decide. I think it's always better to be safe as the babies can breed quite young and a promiscuous young male could breed with a number of females and before you know it your bloodline can be compromised. Just my opinion but it works for me. I have a lovely Chocolate colony but even they throw low grade chocolates which I take out as soon as I can tell their colour is not up to standard, however some of the culls often have nice blue tones and I work with those to develop a blue colony.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Cheers ineke, she wasn't berried before so male was definitely chocolate. I have a tank rdy to make the move for the chocs.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Depends in the generations and strictness of the selective breeding. We should expect them to breed true, but even my blue cherry program throws a batch of wild/clear cherry occasionally, even after 3-4 generations...grrr.....my browns don't tend to throw reds, but blue....so really all depends. Difficult to absolutely guarantee with browns, blue, blacks, blue velvets etc....but reds & yellows are pretty much good now...

Depends on how strict you want to be.....if you're aiming for the perfect colony, then anything not brown gets culled.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • HOF Member

You can just catch out the babies rather than catch the adults that way if there are chocolates they can stay in there. You always need to cull anyway. If you bought from a reliable breeder you will probably be OK. Just remove any that you don't like the colour by the time they are about 6-7 weeks. The fact that she was bred to a chocolate means the babies should be fine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nicest specimen of originals, was thinking girl but when next to red female looks too slim in belly to be a girl.

DSC_0448_zpsbace4b5f.jpg

This is mum.

DSC_0445_zps9add0ec6.jpg

Another original male, other 2 boys like this one (half the size of above two)

DSC_0446_zps13326803.jpg

Following are babies. (3mm?)

Clear and brown (or brown brains?)

DSC_0430_zps2370f1a9.jpg

Red youngster

DSC_0450_zpsb6817340.jpg

Low tank light and tiny babies means in focus shots are very difficult.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Join Our Community!

    Register today, ask questions and share your shrimp and fish tank experiences with us!

  • Must Read SKF Articles

  • Posts

    • sdlTBfanUK
      Thats a great photo, beautiful blue bolt, I hope it survived the molt without dropping the eggs! I think I can just about see some black dots (eyes) on the central egg but can't be 100% sure. I used to (and plan to again) do weekly water change of 10-15% but if you do too large or quick (not drip in new water) that would likely trigger a molt. What KH are they in, my new setup is sitting at (and refusing to budge) KH 3 and PH 7.5 so I may have to settle for neocaridina shrimp this time as opposed to the caridina I want, though not looking/deciding just yet, give the tank a bit more of a run in! Tap water here starts at kH 14, tds 320, when filtered goes to KH 0 and PH 6 but when put in the tank keeps going to KH3 and PH 7.5 despite 3 x 50% water changes???? You may be at 'maximum capacity' with only 20L tank especially if the tank is a cube type rather than shallow type?
    • beanbag
      Right now this tank only has blue bolts and golden bee (red bolts?).  The eggs start off all brown, but at the end, I notice that some are kind of a clear pink-ish color.  So I don't know if that is the egg color of dud or golden bee.  Picture of shrimp only about half hour before molting. The water is always RO + remineralizer, so it should be ok. The tank seems to still be on a "good streak" ever since I started the regimen of weekly water change, monthly gravel vac and plant trim.  The point being to keep the amount of waste low and removing moss / floating plants so that the nitrates go towards growing algae.  At one point, I had three berried females, but only netted about half dozen babies by the end, due to this early molting problem.  There might be about 30-40 shrimp total in 5 gallons, but still very few full-sized adults.
    • ngoomie
      Alright, I've done a bit more research on gentian violet's cancer-causing potential but I haven't yet done research on malachite green's to compare. But from reading the California propositon 65 document about GV (North Americans incl. some Canadians will recognize this as the law that causes some products they buy to be labelled with "known to the state of California to cause cancer", including the exact product I bought) it seems that the risk of cancer is related to internal use, either injection or ingestion. Speaking of ingestion, I think GV bans mainly relate to its use in treating fish/shrimp/etc. which are intended for human consumption, because of the above. And in countries where GV isn't banned for this purpose, it does seem to get used on various species of shrimp without causing any issue for the shrimp themselves (at least enough so for shrimp farming purposes). See the following: In February, the FDA Began Rejecting Imported Shrimp for Gentian Violet and Chloramphenicol (2022 article by Southern Shrimp Alliance) FDA Starts New Calendar Year by Refusing Antibiotic-Contaminated Shrimp from Three BAP-Certified Indian Processors and Adding a BAP-Certified Vietnamese Processor to Import Alert (2024 article by Southern Shrimp Alliance) Southern Shrimp Alliance and some other organizations have tons of other articles in this vein, but I'd be here for a while and would end up writing an absolutely massive post if I were to link every instance I found of articles mentioning shrimp shipments with gentian violet and/or leucogentian violet registering as contaminants. That being said, I know shrimp farmed for consumption and dwarf shrimp are often somewhat distantly related (in fact, the one time a shrimp's species name is listed that I can see, it's the prawn sp. Macrobrachium rosenbergii, who at best occupies the same infraorder as Neocaridina davidi but nothing nearer), but this at least gives a slightly better way of guessing whether it will be safe for aquarium dwarf shrimp or not than my bladder snail anecdote from the OP.
    • sdlTBfanUK
      I would hazard a guess that perhaps those eggs were unfertilized and thereby unviable? Did the eggs change colour, usually yellow to grey as the yolks used up, or any eyes in the eggs. Is your water ok, using RO remineralised and the parameters in range, as I have heard others say that if the water isn't good it can 'force' a molt? How is it going overall, do you have a good size colony in the tank, you may have reached 'maximum occupancy' as a tank can only support so many occupants.
    • beanbag
      Hello folks,  The current problem I am having is that my Taiwan bee shrimp are molting before all their eggs have hatched.  Often the shrimp keep the eggs for 40+ days.  During that time, they lose about half or so, either due to dropping or duds or whatever.  Shortly before molting they look to have about a dozen left, and then they molt with about half a dozen eggs still on the shell.  Then the other shirmp will come and eat the shell.  These last few times, I have been getting around 0-3 surviving babies per batch.  I figure I can make the eggs hatch faster by raising the water temperature more (currently around 68F, which is already a few degrees higher than I used to keep it) or make the shrimp grow slower by feeding them less (protein).  Currently I feed Shrimp King complete every other day, and also a small dab of Shrimp Fit alternating days.  Maybe I can start alternating with more vegetable food like mulberry?  or just decrease the amount of food?
×
×
  • Create New...