this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2024
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I had a little 15 gallon aquarium with a small population of tetras, kuhli loaches, a betta, and two shrimp, plus snails. I bought a 55 gallon tank to give them all a better environment.

I filled the tank and planted it heavily then gave it a week to stabilize before I added anything. I moved snails, the shrimp, and some microfauna over. I bought a bag o bugs to increase microfuna diversity, and a dozen more shrimp, mostly young, and gave that another months to stabilize. The shrimp were growing up, carrying eggs, looking good to go. I added my five tetras from the old tank and everything seemed great for a few more weeks. Everyone was healthy, plants were thriving, baby shrimp were starting to appear. The loaches went in a little later and they've been good all along.

I went to a nice local aquarium store and bought five more tetras. Four days later, all but two tetras - one new, one old - were dead. I have no idea why. Water tested normal, so the ones from the store must have introduced something, but it was outside their return policy. But the shrimp were still doing well, so I moved the betta over. That was this week.

Today I go to check on my baby shrimp, and not only can I not find them - I can't find any shrimp at all. Usually they're all over the place. I could identify most of them individually because I bought a bag of wild colored, so they were very varied. Every single one of them died sometime between this morning and Wednesday night.

I guess it's a temperature issue. It got chilly here for August the last few nights, into the low sixties, and I didn't have a heater in the tank yet.

I'm feeling extremely discouraged. All I want out of these is to be healthy environments where animals can live safe little lives. And this was my biggest, most careful, most planned out aquarium ever. And now it's basically a graveyard. There's no shrimp population to even rebuild from. I have utterly failed in my mission to create a good environment for my little sea creatures.

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[–] PKMKII@hexbear.net 10 points 2 months ago (2 children)

What kind of tetras? I used to have neons but despite parameters being fine they just never lasted. It seems the breeding quality is iffy for a lot of them.

It would make sense if the shrimp went first; invertebrates are more sensitive to parameters being off. I would definitely get a heater in pronto. How’s the betta holding up?

[–] jack@hexbear.net 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Neons. A few small shrimp have been spotted so hopefully there's more in hiding. A heater is now installed.

[–] PKMKII@hexbear.net 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Yeah shrimp are good at disappearing off to alternate dimensions and then showing back up a couple weeks later.

[–] jack@hexbear.net 4 points 2 months ago

There were definitely many, many more than there are now. At least a 75% loss of adults. But hopefully enough to restart, and ideally some babies that are too small to find still.

[–] Spongebobsquarejuche@hexbear.net 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I switched to cardinal tetras because the neon one's kept getting sick. The cardinals are more hearty.

[–] comrade_pibb@hexbear.net 5 points 2 months ago

I'm no expert but a week doesn't sound like enough time to get the tank cycled.

A heater is also really important, most species of "hardy" animals can survive in many conditions, but sudden changes are still pretty intense