I'd let her loose in your tank. She was thriving in there and happy enough to want to breed. You should be proud of that IMO. Now she's condemned to a trap. I know that sounds harsh, but just let her be. Whatever babies survive, will survive. If you're breeding sexy shrimp, then setup a display for that task. Otherwise, to me it seems you will be causing undue stress on the female.Should I be keeping her in the container for the two weeks till hatch? Or should I try to catch her once she gets further along?
I'd let her loose in your tank. She was thriving in there and happy enough to want to breed. You should be proud of that IMO. Now she's condemned to a trap. I know that sounds harsh, but just let her be. Whatever babies survive, will survive. If you're breeding sexy shrimp, then setup a display for that task. Otherwise, to me it seems you will be causing undue stress on the female.
I breed caradina shrimp. I understand they are completely different. But the point I want to make is I have those tanks specifically suited for their survival. I focused for months on developing the right biome for the shrimplets to survive and thrive by having an abundance of food and zero potential predation. Good luck either way you approach it.
Right. Luckily they don’t actually need weird foods they can just eat baby artemia apparentlyI have a feeling you need one of those jellyfish style Kriesel tanks and there's probably some intermediate stages where you need to feed obscure foods to increase success. Seems like there's a few people that have done it if you search around online, but you're looking at almost a month before settlement.
Haha wow!The female who dropped her eggs is pregnant again. At least I know I'll have multiple shots at this