@Anomander If you can post up a full tank photo, it could help folks get an idea of general tank health.
They get quite boisterous when they feed; shoving each other off the food and running away with small bits. I have looked up images of planaria but I haven't been able to see anything like that in the tank (although I've also read that they are largely nocturnal?)I know that shrimp can survive in the worst places as long as there is enough biofilm for them. Granted that they may require adequate filtration/water movement etc. But as said they can adapt and if they are dying off especially the older ones, then its just natural. How are they when you feed them? Are there anything like planaria in the tank?
Do you use hot water from the tap? I wouldn't do that under any circumstances. It can always contain copper in quite high concentrations. If you had ramshorn snails, they would tell you if there is copper in the water. They will immediately retreat into their shell and won't come out again. If there is copper in your water, the only thing that will help is to change the water as quickly as possible.When doing my WC, I use a mix of hot and cold taps to get the replacement water to temperature (25c) before adding Prime to the bucket and then slowly feed the water into the tank via an airline tube. Even though I have a combi boiler, would it be worth using only cold water and adding my backup heater to bring the bucket of water to temperature? Just thinking of eliminating the possibility that, even though I've been using the hot/cold taps for the 4 months I've had the shrimps, there might have been something that changed with the water coming from the boiler?
I wanted internal filters as I didn't want to risk leaks with a canister (live in the top floor flat of a converted house) and decided to go for sponges attached to powerheads so I could still provide some flow/aeration (the flow rate is turned down quite low on both) and also some feeding area for the shrimps.What was the reasoning behind having a sponge filter?
No, not since the original eight. Maybe I should look at introducing some genetic variety.Have you added any new blood into the shrimp line?
I'm putting in the recommended amount with pipette, maybe erring on a bit too much rather than too little. It could be a case of being overly-generous with Prime but it's something I've been doing the whole four months I've had the shrimp (unless something has built up over time?)What about the prime? How much are you putting in?
Now I'm unsure whether to increase or decrease the water change amount(!)Maybe leave the tank for a few weeks and let things play out naturally. I suspect its the weekly water changes that may disturbing something and its only shrimp you are keeping. There is very little waste being produced.
It's quite a new combi-boiler (i.e. installed a couple of years ago) but it can't hurt to try the other heating methodThe hot water may be coming from an old copper boiler? Perhaps the prime did not bind it fully?
Probably best to use your backup heater as you suggested 👍
It could just be natural causes. Some neocaridina only live around a year and unless they were small juveniles when you got them, its difficult to guess their age.About 4 months ago (so when the tank was 3 months old) I purchased 8 Cherry Shrimp.
Have you noticed any small worms in the tank? I haven't had Planaria in my tanks but I've seen other shrimp keepers have issues with the little worms feeding on their shrimp.It looked like it had some kind of small injury (almost like a small squarish piece of its shell was missing from its side with the white tissue showing through) and other shrimp were trying to eat it.
Maybe there was a contaminant on them?I have also added two aldar cones and a Catappa leaf a few days ago.
If you have a test kit its still probably a good idea to check in this situation. If you have the paper dip tests use 3 to 5 of them at the same time to try and get an average reading.I have not tested my water parameters due to the advice that test kits are unreliable.
I added the Water Sprite back in mid-October (not long after I got the shrimps) to deal with a small BGA outbreak. The plant was from Tropica (via Pro Shrimp).Have you added any new plants to the tank recently?
I haven't, and I do fairly close inspections. However, this is only when the light is on and I can't see behind the hardscape and plantsHave you noticed any small worms in the tank? I haven't had Planaria in my tanks but I've seen other shrimp keepers have issues with the little worms feeding on their shrimp.
I added the cones and Catappa very recently, after the first couple of deaths>Maybe there was a contaminant on them?
It's quite a new combi-boiler (i.e. installed a couple of years ago) but it can't hurt to try the other heating method
They are handy to have around for tracking the TDS of the tank over time, and even the ultra cheap ones seem reasonably accurate. In your case I would compare the TDS of the tank water against a sample of your tap water with added ferts in your normal ratio. If the tank water has significantly higher TDS than the tap + ferts then you will know something has been building up in the tank water.Would it be worth getting a TDS meter? And if so, what kind of reading am I looking for?
I've lowered my temp from 25 to 24 and increased surface agitation slightly, just in case it's an oxygen issue (directly or indirectly). How much do you usually water change?Filtration is interpet filter, heater set at 22 and water changes once every 2 weeks.
I'm still gauging the right amount of food, so I remove the dish after 3-4 hours even if there'sfood still there. There's always shrimp in the dish still eating by that time. Maybe I should leave the food in until it's finished but I'm afraid of affecting the water quality, and I've heard that shrimps are like Labradors - they'll continue eating even when full!Are the shrimp finishing all their food when you put in there too?
It's hard to sat as there's different 'generations' and lots of them are hidden in the floaters/hardscape. There's still at least 30, with some very young babies visible. I would perhaps venture to say there's fewer of the original 8 adults left, but again difficult to be certain.How many shrimps do you have left now?
Are you saying there's a murderer?!Perhaps you can set up a video recording the shrimps and timelapse to see if there is any agression amongst a particular shrimp?
I still see the occasional mounted shell, no more or no less than before the deaths started.I know that shrimps release pheromone in the water, do you notice much moulting in the sense do you see cascaded shells in the tank?
I started the dish feeding after the 3rd death, before that I had only been adding a bit of Shrimp Baby every few days. Would overfeeding have a negative impact because of uneaten food polluting the water or because the shrimps have overfed, or both?I guess what Im saying is that disturbance could be a factor, overfeeding which in turn is causing some sensitivity.