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View Full Version : Mysis Shrimp?



adolph_09
Wed, 12th Oct 2011, 12:02 AM
http://youtu.be/_zEVTilCYcs

was just wondering exactly what these guys are because they just had lots and lots of baby that are all over my sump and display. i know the ones to the left are amphipods but what are the others swimming around, mysis shrimp?

Regric25
Wed, 12th Oct 2011, 12:21 AM
I looked up video of mysis shrimp and they look very similar. How did they get into your tank? Did you put them in? Very cool video!

adolph_09
Wed, 12th Oct 2011, 12:32 AM
Thanks!! and no im guessing they just hitch hicked in on live rock. i first noticed they after i fed my tank some of those live tigger pods they sell at LFS, but yesterday i got some phytoplanton from ace (thanks again ace) and fed some to my tank last night then today when i got home from work i noticed them and there babies swimming all over the place

SoLiD
Wed, 12th Oct 2011, 01:05 AM
For sure Mysis Shrimp. They are quite common and reproduce well in our tanks.

justahobby
Wed, 12th Oct 2011, 05:01 AM
x 2 on the mysis. Entertaining little guys the way they spin in circles over and over. I used to have a cove in my big tank similiar to yours that would be full of them. Looks like you have a pretty healthy tank.

adolph_09
Wed, 12th Oct 2011, 09:42 PM
Yeah they sometimes look like they have no idea where they are going ha. So since they are mysis shrimp that means they should get alot bigger right?

justahobby
Thu, 13th Oct 2011, 07:59 AM
That's adult size for them as far as I know. They might be mysids. I never bothered to learn the difference lol

justahobby
Thu, 13th Oct 2011, 08:04 AM
Ok, I looked it up :-p Mysis vs mysids according to someone on reefcentral:

Mysis Shrimp is a Mysid Shrimp, but Mysid Shrimp is quite a general term which incorporates many species of shrimp in both fresh and salt water. Most commonly when a marine aquarist refers to either growing Mysid Shrimp and usually when they find a Mysid Shrimp hitch hiker, they are often talking about Opossum Shrimp (Mysis relicta). But not always. More often than not, it's difficult to identify a shrimp beyond Mysid, so Mysid is what is used.