 |
| Author |
Message |
seanyuki
Age: 50
Joined: 13 Apr 2008
Posts: 2

|
|
Hi all,
This is my first post in this forum...and please forgive me if I ask silly questions.This will be my first Red Cheery Shrimp tank.
I am planning to use a brand new 20 gallons tank with Eco soil and a sponge filter.I am planning to get 80-100 Red Cherry Shrimps from LFS.
DO I use a cycled sponge filter from my existing fish tank or just use a brand new sponge filter. Are shrimps more delicate in catching diseases than fish.
Some fish hobbyist mentioned this to me.Will this work for me in the new set up for the shrimp tank.
Quote
You don't really need benefitial bacteria in the start.....really
You can have the tank running and put in the fish and try to feed slowly for the first 2 weeks ...gradually reaching to normal feeding rate or the rate you prefer. By then, the biological filtration will be establishes and working effectively bi itself.
If you were to use a filter media or any equipment from another tank or another culture, you might just accidently innoculate disease from the other fishes to your further fish and that disease may not be harmful to the existing because the fishes there already got the immune but introducing it to the new fish might just make the fish sick if not mortality.
unquote
Please enlighten me.
Cheers
Francis |
|
|
|
|
|
 |
     |
 |
southerndesert

Age: 52
Joined: 13 Mar 2008
Posts: 31
Location: Arizona

|
|
Hi and my suggestion it to always use a well cycled tank to introduce your shrimp to. They are very sensitive to "dirty" water. Using "used" water from another tank as well as a used sponge filter will greatly increase cycle time, but still be sure no Ammonia or Nitrites are present or you may find dead shrimp.
YES they need "Beneficial Bacteria" healthy and doing it's job ridding your water of these harmful elements.
Cheers, Bill |
|
|
|
|
|
 |
     |
 |
Ulli Bauer
Crustaforum-Team


Age: 34
Joined: 04 Mar 2008
Posts: 290
Location: Weinstadt

|
|
Hi Francis,
nice to have you here! And remember - there are no stupid questions, only stupid anwers
Have you seen our primer: http://www.crustaforum.com/topic,228,-shrimpkeeping-101.html ?
If you can use a cycled sponge filter or filter muck from a cycled tank you don't absolutely need those liquid bacteria. Firstly, if they haven't been stored right they're probably dead anyway, and secondly, 1,000,000,000 bacteria might sound a lot, but in the range of bacteria this is really a very small bunch...
Generally, shrimp are not susceptible to the same illnesses than fish, so you can practically rule out any infection risk when taking stuff from a fish tank.
Regarding the general sensitivity of shrimp: http://www.crustaforum.com/topic,65,-diseases-or-other-problems%3F.html
Nitrite blocks the oxygen receptors on the hemoglobin. As shrimp don't have any hemoglobin in their blood they're a lot less susceptible to nitrite than fish. When I threw out the interior filter in my small tank the nitrite reached levels of over 1 mg/l with no ill effect to the shrimp. The snails wandered to the surface (but they do have hemoglobin after all).
What really affects shrimp are high nitrate levels of over 20, ammonia and phosphate, you should keep an eye on those.
Cheers
Ulli |
|
|
|
_________________ If it ain't broken, don't repair it. |
|
 |
    |
 |
seanyuki
Age: 50
Joined: 13 Apr 2008
Posts: 2

|
|
Hi Bill/Ulli
Many thanks for your quick replies.I will go over all the post in this forum so I will know what to do next Thanks again for your help.
Cheers
Francis |
|
|
|
|
|
 |
     |
 |
24/7
Age: 45
Joined: 30 Mar 2008
Posts: 25

|
|
Francis
Nice to see you here
John |
|
|
|
|
|
 |
    |
 |
|
|
|
View next topic
View previous topic
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum You cannot attach files in this forum You can download files in this forum
|
All times are GMT
0 blocked attacks
|
|