LOL! You tell us!!

Mama Crabs wrote: LOL! You tell us!!
MudCrabDude wrote:Wow, that's interesting to hear.
I know (on the old nature documentaries) male fiddler crabs do take their mates underground when the tides come. And the Christmas Island Red Land Crabs do so supposedly as well...so it may be the case here. It may explain how your 1-3-years-captive crabs may have been able breed and subsequently lay eggs without you previously suspecting.
Yeah, that will probably be a problem.samurai_crab wrote:The next hard part after just keeping them alive will be when they are ready for land and need tiny shells
Thank you!wolfnipplechips wrote:You are doing a great job!! I am so excited!I've been telling everybody who will listen about this.
Haha, that would be so nice of you, because I think that shells that small are pretty hard to find here - though I really don't know, I have to take a good look around. Here in Sweden it is hard enough finding a regular medium-sized turbo though. :roll: But if they would get to that stage, it's still several months away, so I have a lot of time to look around.piccolo41099 wrote:If they make it to the stage of needing teeny tiny shells, I bet everyone on this board will be looking for shells for you.
Thank you! Wow, that was a lot of text. xD I am way too tired to read all of that tonight, but i read the beginnig, and they fed the zoeae with newly hatched Artemia nauplii. Should I feed mine with that? (Yikes, I know NOTHING about Artemia) So phytoplankton isn't everything they need?wodesorel wrote:Here's a paper on how compressus larvae were raised in a lab. It details the different stages and the time-frame, so even though it's not the same species it should give you an idea of what to expect. (They took already egg-laden females from the wild though.)
http://si-pddr.si.edu/dspace/bitstream/ ... Harvey.pdf