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SKF welcomes Shrimpmaster to our community


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<!-- isHtml:1 --><!-- isHtml:1 -->Hello Shrimpmaster,

Welcome to Shrimp Keepers Forum. Please feel free to browse around and get to know others. If you have any questions please don't hesitate to ask.

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Thank you very much.

 

You've even give me an Shrimp Master sub board, awesome. Although I'm just a small hobbyist with a small blog :geek: . Well, I will try to keep up and post from time to time.

 

I really enjoy Marco photography of shrimp. I guess most shrimp keepers will appreciate this.

 

Greetings!

 

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6012a754d6fd2a24c9931e4d47ab1b60.jpg

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You take some great macro photos. Please share your photography experiences here as we have a number of keen photographers here that are new to macros.

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Lovely shrimp and macros.

What's those two oval shaped things on the moulted shell?

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Welcome shrimpmaster!! Amazing image, hope you saved the babies from the image, they look a lovely red!

Very much looking forward to seeing more of your images!

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LOL!!! Sorry...  The word the is too strong. I should quote the migrated word like this "migrated". 

 

Hope we will have fun together here. ;)

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It's an unkown one. It popped up in my mixed tank. Mother is Tagerine Tiger, the father is unknown. But the fact it popped up tells me that the Yellow King Kong is not that hard to breed though. Simply cross a Tagerine Tiger with one of the 10 different shrimp in my mixed tank and I will know the answer ;). Maybe it's not the same as a Yellow King Kong, that is possible too. I will post some pictures when it's an adult.

Edited by Shrimpmaster
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Actually, we should avoid using the term "Yellow King Kong". If not, it will confuse people.

Yes I agree! This one I will call it just 'yellow shrimp' whatever it turn out to be. If I ever manage to reproduce this I can tell more about it.

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Welcome to the forum, hope you have as much fun here as we do! :welcome:

 

Fantastic shots by the way, what lens are you using?

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    • 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.
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