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Hello marquisem, 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. regards, skfadmin

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Hi everyone, I've kept fish for about a decade but just recently included snails and a shrimp to my tanks and I've fallen in love. I've come here to learn more and hopefully get all my newbie questions answered. 

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Hi everyone, I have been keeping fish for about a decade and have just recently added a shrimp to the mix. Almost instantly I fell in love, I have a single bamboo shrimp in my 20g tank along with a few other fish inhabitants and a blue mystery snail. My other tank is a 29g tall with 8 cardinal tetras, 5 sterbai corys, two snails, and a male female pair of apistogramma macmastori cichlids. I'd love to have a heavily planted shrimp tank in my bedroom and that's why I'm here, to ask lots of questions to make sure I have the capacity to make it work well.

I look forward to exploring this forum.

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Hey welcome to SKF. If you have any questions in particular, please feel free to ask.

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

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Hey welcome to SKF. If you have any questions in particular, please feel free to ask.

A particular question that I have is I want if possible to set up a 2.5g heavily planted shrimp tank, is this possible? What kind of shrimp would work best in a tank that small? I would prefer to utilize plants that wouldn't require a CO2 injector is a heavily planted tank possible without it? I'm at the very preliminary stage so any and all advice and assistance would be much appreciated. 

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2.5 G is around 10 litres.

Yes its possible. Although if you heavily plant a tank that small, then it might make it very difficult to see the shrimp. The other consideration is that tanks that small will experience rapid changes in temperature (for example overnight drop in temperature followed by rapid rise the next day). Shrimp are highly sensitive to sudden changes in water parameters including temperature. I'd suggest going with a tank at least 2 times larger, preferably more.

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Having a heater in the tank would not be a problem, the tank would be heated, filtered and have a light. I just don't really have room for anything larger.

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Whilst you can heat the tank using a heater, this will not maintain a stable temperature. The problem is stability, not necessarily whether or not you can controll the temperature. For example, as the heater comes on, a small tank heats more rapidly than a large tank. This can stress your shrimp.

The other point to consider is: Shrimp do best at around a temperature of 23*C and once the tank reaches above 25*C, shrimp can start to die. So if you get a hot day, your tank will heat up rapidly (and cool rapidly in the evening) compared to if you have a larger tank.

If you are limited by space, try using a taller tank. Shrimp dont mind what shape their tank is, assuming all their requirements are met (e.g, oxygen, low nitrates, no ammonia, ect.). In all cases, bigger is better. I'm not trying to discourage you from keeping shrimp, but it will be easier and likely more successful if you use as large a tank as you can.

Best of luck.

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