lljdma06
New member
Setup #1 - Aqueon Evolve 2
So... I thought this one was dead.
I got him/her from a LFS. The owner was freaked out about it, so I took it home for free. I initially put it in my 8g biocube. I hadn't seen it for weeks, so I thought it had died. Turns out, it had only molted, and two days ago I found it happily eating pellets with the giant hermit crabs (Electric blue hermits) that it was sharing a home with. Seeing as I had thought this mantis was dead, I had planned to move my large female wennerae to the Biocube. This is still a go, and I know you can't keep two in one tank, so... I set up a small tank for him. It's about an inch and a quarter now, so this'll make a great temporary home until I upgrade.
In the cup, it already cracked it. The wennerae are way more aggressive than the curacaoensis, but also less trusting of me. My curacaoensis is sweeter, if you can call a mantis shrimp sweet.
The tank is an Evolve 2. Run with nothing really, just LR, caulerpa and stock filtration. He's the only planned stocking, barring pest anemones, and his occasional live dinner entree.
It's a nice little tank, cheaper than the glass Fluval Spec. Down the road, most of my Caribbean mantis shrimp will go in Spec 5s. I thought I did a pretty good job on the rock work. All of it is cured stuff I had circulating in a bucket from old tanks and the sand is from the Biocube.
Here he is. He started digging and roaming about right away. I think he approves. You can definitely make out the white meral spots.

I'm pleased. Hopefully, both of my wennerae will be more interactive now that they'll be in homes that don't consist of dense mats of chaeto and caulerpa. Half the time, I couldn't even see them, which made feeding/interaction very hard. I think I've created in the setups natural-looking environments that the mantis shrimp will appreciate, but at the same time aesthetically pleasing and easier for viewing.
Thanks for looking, stay tuned for the second setup. That'll be planted today.
L
So... I thought this one was dead.
I got him/her from a LFS. The owner was freaked out about it, so I took it home for free. I initially put it in my 8g biocube. I hadn't seen it for weeks, so I thought it had died. Turns out, it had only molted, and two days ago I found it happily eating pellets with the giant hermit crabs (Electric blue hermits) that it was sharing a home with. Seeing as I had thought this mantis was dead, I had planned to move my large female wennerae to the Biocube. This is still a go, and I know you can't keep two in one tank, so... I set up a small tank for him. It's about an inch and a quarter now, so this'll make a great temporary home until I upgrade.
In the cup, it already cracked it. The wennerae are way more aggressive than the curacaoensis, but also less trusting of me. My curacaoensis is sweeter, if you can call a mantis shrimp sweet.

The tank is an Evolve 2. Run with nothing really, just LR, caulerpa and stock filtration. He's the only planned stocking, barring pest anemones, and his occasional live dinner entree.

It's a nice little tank, cheaper than the glass Fluval Spec. Down the road, most of my Caribbean mantis shrimp will go in Spec 5s. I thought I did a pretty good job on the rock work. All of it is cured stuff I had circulating in a bucket from old tanks and the sand is from the Biocube.


Here he is. He started digging and roaming about right away. I think he approves. You can definitely make out the white meral spots.


I'm pleased. Hopefully, both of my wennerae will be more interactive now that they'll be in homes that don't consist of dense mats of chaeto and caulerpa. Half the time, I couldn't even see them, which made feeding/interaction very hard. I think I've created in the setups natural-looking environments that the mantis shrimp will appreciate, but at the same time aesthetically pleasing and easier for viewing.
Thanks for looking, stay tuned for the second setup. That'll be planted today.
L