Bee shrimp explained

The bee shrimp (Caridina cantonensis), is a species of small freshwater shrimp in the family Atyidae. It is native to Taiwan.[1] These shrimp are scavengers, and eat small pieces of decayed vegetation and algae.[2] Bee shrimp have a life span of about 18 months. They enjoy a temperature in the 70F78F range.[3] Many modern versions of bee shrimp are selectively bred for their characteristics.[4]

Bee shrimp are in demand as aquarium pets. In Taiwan and other areas with suitable climates shrimp farms have sprung up to supply Bee shrimp,[5] although they are more difficult to farm than other shrimp because their health depends on being raised in soft water that matches the pH of their native streams.[6]

Variations

There are many variants of the bee shrimp:

Shrimp breeders have given colourful names to the many other variants of the bee shrimp, which include the Princess Bee, Blue Bolt, Tangerine Tiger and Shadow Panda.

Reproduction

Female Caridina cantonensis can be distinguished from males by size; the female is larger than the male, and has a deeper abdomen. The female shrimp signal readiness to mate by releasing pheromones into the water which lead the males to the female. During this time swimming activity can be quite vigorous as males search for the females.

The eggs are carried underneath the female's abdomen and uses the pleopods to maintain a continuous circulation of water. The eggs hatch to reveal tiny versions of the adult shrimp.[9]

The duration the female carries the eggs before they hatch is linked to water temperature. At 22C the expected hatching time is 28 days. At 24C25C the shrimp develop the strongest colours.

Extended high water temperatures result in higher juvenile and adult mortality, and less egg survivability. Warmer water will bring invertebrates to sexual maturity earlier but with a smaller body size than cold water. A cold water environment will slow down invertebrate sexual maturity; consequently the shrimp have longer to grow, have a larger body size at sexual maturity than if they had been brought up in warmer water.

Taxonomy

A phylogenetic analysis conducted by Chen, Chen, and Guo (2020) found Caridina cantonensis to be sister to C. mariae. [10] The tree below is summarized from their analysis:

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.tfhmagazine.com/details/articles/the-latest-buzz-freshwater-bee-shrimp-full-article.htm "The Latest Buzz: Freshwater Bee Shrimp"
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20060507141309/http://www.fishyou.com/shrimp-crs.php "Crystal Red Shrimp"
  3. Web site: 15 Best Shrimp for a Freshwater Aquarium. 26 April 2020.
  4. Web site: Shrimp caresheet: Golden bee shrimp (Caridina cf. Cantonensis) | the Shrimp Farm.
  5. http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20140512000049&cid=1102 Ornamental varieties net big money for Taiwan Fu Shrimp"
  6. http://www.aquariumslife.com/freshwater-shrimp/bee-shrimp-caridina-cantonensissp-bee/ "Bee Shrimp – Caridina cantonensissp. 'Bee'
  7. http://www.planetinverts.com/Blue_Bee_Shrimp.html "Blue Bee Shrimp"
  8. http://aquariuminfo.org/crs.html "Crystal Red Shrimp"
  9. Journal of the North American Benthological Society . 24 . 4 . 845–857 . 2005 . 10.1899/05-022.1 . Genetic differentiation of Caridina cantonensis (Decapoda:Atyidae) in Hong Kong streams . Rita S. W. Yam & David Dudgeon. 84588745 .
  10. Chen . Qing-Hua . Chen . Wen-Jian . Guo . Zhao-Liang . Two freshwater shrimp species of the genus Caridina (Decapoda, Caridea, Atyidae) from Dawanshan Island, Guangdong, China, with the description of a new species . ZooKeys . 2020 . 923 . 15–32 . 10.3897/zookeys.923.48593 . 32292268 . 7142168 . free .