iggiethegecko
New member
I'm new to breeding red cherry shrimps and daphnia (and raising axolotls for that matter) and was looking for some advise from the experts!
I just acquired some axolotl eggs (10 days old) and am trying to start a daphnia culture so I'll hopefully have new born daphnia ready for when the axis start to hatch. The cherry shrimps are more of an ongoing project for when the axolotls start to grow bigger.
I got the red cherries a week ago, they're a mixture of about 6 adults and 6-8 smaller juveniles. The pet shop had some happily breeding away and shook a plant and gave me a bag. I've had some problems with water quality, ammonia seems to have shot up since I added them to the tank, so I've been doing 30% water changes daily to sort this. The shrimps seem to be doing fine and not too affected at this stage (nice red colour and constantly eating). However, I was looking closely at the tank yesterday and noticed quite a few pin prick sized white dots swimming around. The bigger ones seem to have a one dot body with 2 tail like dots, (sort of like mickey mouse head/pyramid shape if that makes sense). Are these likely to be baby red cherries? Just wondering whether I need to be more vigilant in saving my water from the water changes just in case.
The daphnia are just a bag I bought from the pet shop, I'm not sure how successful I'll be with getting enough baby daphnia in the beginning, so will give it a week and get a brine shrimp hatchery for the baby axis if necessary. The daphnia are just in shallow tubs with a bit of java moss at the moment, I haven't noticed any dead ones yet and have seen them breeding. Yesterday a lot of them were swimming around with black bits on their backs, which I understand are eggs. My question is do the eggs remain black in the water? I have noticed a few black dots sitting in the bottom of the tubs and I'd quite like to keep these separate, if they are eggs, for ease of sorting the babies from the adults.
Sorry for the long post, I have checked out the daphnia breeding article on here and done a fair bit of online research, but struggling with knowing what I should be looking for when it comes to eggs and newborn red cherries. Just want to make sure I have live food for my babie axies so if anyone can help with any of my questions I'd be really grateful :happy:
I just acquired some axolotl eggs (10 days old) and am trying to start a daphnia culture so I'll hopefully have new born daphnia ready for when the axis start to hatch. The cherry shrimps are more of an ongoing project for when the axolotls start to grow bigger.
I got the red cherries a week ago, they're a mixture of about 6 adults and 6-8 smaller juveniles. The pet shop had some happily breeding away and shook a plant and gave me a bag. I've had some problems with water quality, ammonia seems to have shot up since I added them to the tank, so I've been doing 30% water changes daily to sort this. The shrimps seem to be doing fine and not too affected at this stage (nice red colour and constantly eating). However, I was looking closely at the tank yesterday and noticed quite a few pin prick sized white dots swimming around. The bigger ones seem to have a one dot body with 2 tail like dots, (sort of like mickey mouse head/pyramid shape if that makes sense). Are these likely to be baby red cherries? Just wondering whether I need to be more vigilant in saving my water from the water changes just in case.
The daphnia are just a bag I bought from the pet shop, I'm not sure how successful I'll be with getting enough baby daphnia in the beginning, so will give it a week and get a brine shrimp hatchery for the baby axis if necessary. The daphnia are just in shallow tubs with a bit of java moss at the moment, I haven't noticed any dead ones yet and have seen them breeding. Yesterday a lot of them were swimming around with black bits on their backs, which I understand are eggs. My question is do the eggs remain black in the water? I have noticed a few black dots sitting in the bottom of the tubs and I'd quite like to keep these separate, if they are eggs, for ease of sorting the babies from the adults.
Sorry for the long post, I have checked out the daphnia breeding article on here and done a fair bit of online research, but struggling with knowing what I should be looking for when it comes to eggs and newborn red cherries. Just want to make sure I have live food for my babie axies so if anyone can help with any of my questions I'd be really grateful :happy: