Motörcrab wrote: ↑Fri Apr 10, 2020 6:05 pm
For raising Zoea this would probably still be way to big for them to eat as Joe stated. Most people add micro algae like Spirulina, Phytoplankton or Nannochloropsis to the water. People also raise brine shrimp to add to the water as food as well. The hardest part is constant upkeep and refreshing the water daily. It gets to be rather pricey unless you make the micro algae yourself.
Mary Akers is the one to really explain everything in more detail. Over the last few years she has successfully reared hundreds or well over a thousand of zoea to become baby hermit crabs! Reading her blogs really shows how much work it really takes.
https://maryakers.com/
Then maybe I can feed it once they are big enough to get their mouths around it.
Mary Akers's blog inspired me to try to start breeding. Her blog is the very first thing I read. That's when I got interested in making a bioactive, to 'promote' them to do... stuff. I am fully aware of the difficulty of raising babies. I've already made the holding space for the Zoea, talked to a pet store to help me adopt them out IF they get to land. I know its a bit early to think about all this, as they generally start mating in June-July, I'm just trying to prepare myself.

. I mean, I don't even know if they will mate (although one of my males has started to show guarding behaviors to one of my females) And I certainly don't know if
I myself will be able rear them, let alone bring them to land. Although it's worth a shot if it means that captive-bred hermit crabs will go to a home that will properly take care of them, and if the pet store in my town starts selling captive breeds instead of wild-caughts. But I mean, that's just my thought, my goal. does not have to work out.
