LoveTheEarth11 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 13, 2020 4:48 pm
Hello!
I have a 45 gal bioactive aquarium, and 5 pp's. My ultimate goal is to breed them. (I have already started to see 'guarding' behaviors between my two largest, but it could easily be something else.) Yes, I have fully read Mary Akers's blog and such. She is the one who is inspiring this goal.
I am starting to make an amazon list of supplies needed to rear them, but I have no clue when that will be able to ship due to COVID-19
I understand that they need to be fed constantly, like 3 times a day. I was wondering if this product would work to hatch brine shrimp and feed them to the zoea?
https://www.amazon.com/Koller-Products- ... ies&sr=1-4
Also, say the eggs are hatched during quarantine. What do I do then? I have no access to air bubbles to make the rearing tank for Zoea. My neighbor does have brine shrimp eggs (Dead) That I can uses as food, and I bet I can find some from other places as well, but would the Zoea survive without proper aeration? I do have a powerful filter that I could use to aerate the rearing tank... But I don't know how long that would last. (Assuming that we are in quarantine for longer than 2 months, that my female IS gravid, and she successfully spawns her eggs,)
Lastly, is there any tips/ really ANY basic knowledge you guys can give me?
Thanks!
Good luck!! I'm so glad that you are inspired by my efforts. Really, that's one of my biggest goals: to get others doing this so we can make a big (hopefully permanent) dent in the capture of wild crabs. Depending on where you are physically located, if you have PPs, you probably won't see mating until June or July. I've watched other people posting about PPs having eggs, and it seems to happen earlier in the summer for people in the warmer south and later for those in the north (like me--my PPs tend to mate in August and September). It's not a hard-and-fast rule, of course, and as far as I've learned, there
are no hard and fast rules in this venture but every attempt teaches us something more about the best (and simplest) methods to use. I will be giving a talk at (virtual) Crab Con this year that will offer tip to create the most basic setup--one that has given me the best results. (I promise I am trying to find out how to make this easiest for ALL of us.)
If you can get nannochloropsis, I would recommend you order that. It will keep in the fridge for several months if you agitate it every day (just invert the bottle quickly once a day). Mercer of Montana is where I get mine and the quality has always been good. Shipping is slower now, but they are shipping, so you could order now to have it on hand. You could even culture it if you wanted to make sure you had enough.
I feed Instant Baby Brine shrimp (Ocean Nutrition brand) for the first week or so and it works well. Just be sure not to overfeed. One bottle should last you for the whole spawn-to-land course unless you have multiple spawns to deal with. I also feed spirulina, chlorella, Marine Snow, and a couple of other things used to feed corals (PhytoPlan and Goniopower), but these aren't necessary, especially if you have nannochloropsis. I just like to round out their diet as much as possible, but I'm also trying to get as many to land as possible.
After about a week, they really prefer live brine shrimp--it's also better for them and helps to activate their hunting instinct. You don't really have to worry about having freshly hatched brine shrimp for them every couple of hours. Artemia are most nutritious when they still have the yolk sack, but the larvae will still consume them and will benefit from it. I keep two mason jars going at a time, staggered by start date and every 24 hours I swap the older one out for a fresh jar. I use the San Francisco brand of brine shrimp eggs. Other brands are cheaper, but they don't hatch as well (imo) and they tend to have a lot of dirt/detritus that makes the water gross fast.
Once the larvae make megalopa, they can't easily catch brine shrimp and they will prefer sinking pellets like you feed to shrimp, crayfish, or lobster. You really do need to be careful about offering any of the frozen stuff because it will foul the water quickly. Flitration isn't a great option because the zoeae get sucked into the filter easily and you will likely lose a lot. You definitely need aeration, though. I can't see any way you succeed without an airstone in there with them. Maybe you will be the one to disprove that if you try to raise them without a bubbler, but personally I don't think it will work.
Teeny tiny shells will also be one of your biggest hurdles. At one time I had hoped to be able to offer them to people attempting this, but it's just way too time-intensive for me to do that for others. I can barely find and keep enough on hand for my breeding efforts.
Keep us posted and good luck! If you succeed, I will certify you as an official breeder (if you like) and provide you with the stamp, seal, and digital file to create official application papers that certify that.