Green Atya from the Philippines (now with pix!)
Moderator: Mustafa
Green Atya from the Philippines (now with pix!)
Anybody know anything about Green Atya from the Philippines? Or Mindanao "red dragon" Caridina? (Both about 1.5-2" and entirely freshwater, I gather.)
Last edited by Chaca on Sun Jun 12, 2005 6:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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I saw those red dragonshrimps this week in a German webshop
http://www.interaquaristik.de/catalog/x ... cbeb27bf76
Probably Mustafa will be able to give a good translating, otherwise i'm willing to give it a go
I orderd here before and everything was ok but all the people who orderd after me had problems with sick shrimps or even dead shrimps on arrival So i'm a bit worried to order here again.
http://www.interaquaristik.de/catalog/x ... cbeb27bf76
Probably Mustafa will be able to give a good translating, otherwise i'm willing to give it a go
I orderd here before and everything was ok but all the people who orderd after me had problems with sick shrimps or even dead shrimps on arrival So i'm a bit worried to order here again.
Hi folks,
That website just says (short summary) that these shrimp are a novelty and look great with green plants in the backround. It further says that they are pretty easy to breed. I doubt that, however, since the shrimp looks like it has tiny eggs and if it occurs both in Indonesia and the Philippines, then chances are that it's larvae floated to one or the other place from some common origin at some point and hence need saltwater to survive. Most shrimp that are supposedly "easy" to breed (i.e. produce miniature versions of themselves in freshwater) have very restricted distributions.
In any case...I am looking forward to seeing the "green Atya" in a few weeks.
Take care,
Mustafa
That website just says (short summary) that these shrimp are a novelty and look great with green plants in the backround. It further says that they are pretty easy to breed. I doubt that, however, since the shrimp looks like it has tiny eggs and if it occurs both in Indonesia and the Philippines, then chances are that it's larvae floated to one or the other place from some common origin at some point and hence need saltwater to survive. Most shrimp that are supposedly "easy" to breed (i.e. produce miniature versions of themselves in freshwater) have very restricted distributions.
In any case...I am looking forward to seeing the "green Atya" in a few weeks.
Take care,
Mustafa
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Haha, nog een nederlander They have those green ataya's too now: they call them green leave dwardfs but i bet those are the same.Chaca wrote:Dank je, Antoinette. Probably the same "Red Dragon", though my list says "Mindanao" and the German page says "Indonesia". I'll pass on the red dragons and try the green Atya this time. Will post pix in a week or two...
http://www.interaquaristik.de/catalog/x ... 1118f0f43e
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15 of the "green Philippine Atya" arrived today. Quite expensive as far as these things go at $1/each. Size is about 1.5". All arrived in excellent shape, and were feeding within minutes of arrival.
Interesting behavior and quite pretty, even if I don't see much "green". Maybe they'll get greener once they settle in. These pix were taken as soon as I put them into the tank.
Interesting behavior and quite pretty, even if I don't see much "green". Maybe they'll get greener once they settle in. These pix were taken as soon as I put them into the tank.
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I'm pretty sure it's Atyoida pilipes Newport, 1847.
See the following links...
http://endemia.org/faune/fiche.php?code ... 464ce5e900
This link notes that the larvae are found in brackish water, so I guess I'm not going to be spawning these shrimp any time soon.
http://www.interaquaristik.de/catalog/x ... da_pilipes
http://biomar.free.fr/atyoida_pilipes.html
http://decapoda.free.fr/fiche.php?sp=93
Seems like it has a very wide distribution throughout the Pacific islands.
See the following links...
http://endemia.org/faune/fiche.php?code ... 464ce5e900
This link notes that the larvae are found in brackish water, so I guess I'm not going to be spawning these shrimp any time soon.
http://www.interaquaristik.de/catalog/x ... da_pilipes
http://biomar.free.fr/atyoida_pilipes.html
http://decapoda.free.fr/fiche.php?sp=93
Seems like it has a very wide distribution throughout the Pacific islands.
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Very cool. Look slike very close cousins. Perhaps A. bisulcata originated from some odd A. philipes larvae that somehow found their way to the very isolated Hawaiian islands a very very long time ago.
All the pics of the Philippine atyoid look like females. Do all your individuals really have that deep bodied pregnant appearance to them?
All the pics of the Philippine atyoid look like females. Do all your individuals really have that deep bodied pregnant appearance to them?