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Thread: Peppermint shrimp question

  1. #11

    Default RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    Cool. I like the color you've got going in your tank and the EVCs are much cheaper than the XM 15ks I've been looking at. I wonder what the DE bulb color looks like in the EVC. I hope it is close to the same.
    Kyle, TX

  2. #12

    Default Re: RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    Quote Originally Posted by GaryP
    I was going to say haggis, but a lot of people here don't know what that is.
    I had managed to blot out my memories of haggis but alas you have made them return with a vengeance. Scottish 'cuisine' :blink

    As for the peppermints - I had a bunch I put in my tank from the gulf a couple years ago - they did ok on the aiptasia but over time my lyretail hawk ate them all - funny to see a 3" fish swimming around with a pair of 3" antenna sticking out of his mouth.
    30 Gallon reef, 220 gallon South American Cichlid tank.

  3. #13

    Default Re: RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    Quote Originally Posted by GaryP
    They may come from an area that may not have aiptasia in the wild.
    The ones I collect eat aptasia, though we do have it all down here anyway. :o

  4. #14
    Join Date
    10-02-2005
    Location
    I-10 & 1604 area
    Posts
    98

    Default Re: RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    Quote Originally Posted by GaryP
    I was going to say haggis, but a lot of people here don't know what that is.
    Or Poutine for anybody from down here :P Yuck!
    I have a neglected 29 gallon tank :P

  5. #15

    Default RE: Re: RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    The peppermints in my tank kept the aiptasia down but ripped the guts out of my tubastrea as well as all the tunicates and cucumbers in my tank. All the filter feeders in the live rock were removed. They also killed a large sebae anemone. I had to rescue an ultra rose BTA from someone else who had peppermint shrimp too. Once the peppermints were gone, the aiptaisa returned with a vengence. There are many dynamics in a large sps tank with a fuge over 100 gallons and lots of cover when excess fish food can keep all the shrimp happy. In tanks with large predators like lobsters and large brittle stars or large crabs, peppermint shrimp may be the only answer that will work. In tanks with specialized feeders and many soft bodied inverts, peppermints more often than not become a predator and are often reported to do what Joshua described. Most of the Centropygy angels and many butterflies eat aiptasia too and sometimes the peppermints get all the credit for it when they didn't do it all. Its easy to train them to eat aiptasia, just feed one in front of them and they will learn their food is in the aiptasia. They'll figure out the rest. If you keep soft bodied inverts, its best done in a separate QT tank. Since they are not a target predator, proceed with care and maybe you will be one of the lucky ones.
    Larry
    INSTAR
    CEO, Biologist
    "Heck, the water is clear, must be good"

  6. #16

    Default RE: Re: RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    I've never had a problem at all with peppermints from the store or florida eating anything but dead snails and aptasia, as well as mysis. Sounds like you had a camel shrimp. I'm not sure how well these guys are doing since I never see them. The only one I've seen since they went into the tank hangs out in the opening of my return from the sump after the lights go out. Its really weird seeing a tail end sticking out of a bulkhead.
    Kyle, TX

  7. #17

    Default RE: Re: RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    No, camels are very different. Easy to tell apart. The field is split about 50/50 between those who will never have them again and those that love them. I liked my cukes, but they turned into football toys for the shrimp until one day they get turned inside out by them. It all depends on what a tank is designed for. I used to watch them go for a walk and pull tentacles off of the montipora as they went. Didn't seem to hurt the coral, but, not really my thing to have that going on. They did that on a regular basis when they thought no one was around. Considering their history, not worth it. I used to breed them for a project. They definitely have the most intriguing and colorfully bizzare larval forms imaginable and adults, if not scared to death make pretty fair scavengers. But, you pointed out that they are predatory in nature too if they eat mysis. Mysis and other small things are a great addition to the bio diversity of the tank and animals that diminish that are just not for some of us. I now have some cool life forms growing from the rocks and tons of mysis and I like that better.
    Larry
    INSTAR
    CEO, Biologist
    "Heck, the water is clear, must be good"

  8. #18

    Default RE: Re: RE: Peppermint shrimp question

    I was refering to frozen mysis. They eat just about anything you add to the tank for food.
    Kyle, TX

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