Mantis Shrimp ID

petenick

New member
Yesterday I went and bought a nice little rock from a local store with two mushrooms and a few small anemones on it (not aiptasia). I took it home and was acclimating it, admiring my new mushrooms. I peered into a hole and I saw something look back at me! I knew from the eyes that it was a mantis shrimp. I used an older tank and water from an existing tank and put the rock in it to try and coax him out but that didn't work. Today I temperature matched some fresh water in a bucket and dunked the rock in. He came flying out of his burrow, and I scooped him up and into the tank he went. I am having a little trouble ID'ing it. I think it is a green mantis shrimp but I am unsure. He is about 2" long. Would a 5.5 gallon tank be fitting? I would be putting acrylic in the bottom under the sand bed just to be safe. Here are a few pictures of him, if anyone wants to confirm or change my ID of a green mantis shrimp:

2217282942_87ce24dbbb_o.jpg


2217282750_e5a75b0c68_o.jpg


2217283200_6133bef37f_o.jpg


2216491643_a25f1f8245_o.jpg
 
lol green mantis shrimp isn't an ID, it's a description :)

What you have there is a haptosquilla trispinosa. It will stay quite small, and will rarely leave its burrow. Most snails are probably safe with it as long as it is well fed. Feed it once every 2-3 days with a frozen meaty food. Soak in selcon or similar food supplement once a week.

BTW the acrylic is totally unecessary :) A 5.5 would be perfect.

Dan
 
I apologize for the poor ID, I was using the common name found on Dr. Roy's list for Gonodactylellus viridis.
Thank you very much for the quick response. One more question, should I be stuffing the food into an empty shell?
 
No problem, just that green mantis could describe nearly every common mantis hitch hiker from G. smithii, N. wennerae, and even P. ciliata (though it doesn't really hitch hike) :D The meat is fine outside a snail shell. Generally with larger species losing raptorial appendages from lack of excersice is a big worry but it isn't too common in smaller species. Maybe a small SW ghost shrimp or a nass snail a month would be more than enough of a workout IMO. Besides, they will likely spend a bit of time killing amphipods and the like on your live rock.

Dan
 
The green animal that came out of the rock is definitely not Haptosquilla trispinosa. It is a gonodactylid, not a protosquillid. From these photos I can't id it. Try to get a shot of the tail from above and behind. Also, what color are the meral spots. I assume they are white or neutral.

Roy
 
This is the best shot i have right now, I will try to get behind the tank for some better ones.
2216491509_3fcc82e8df_o.jpg

The meral spots are very difficult to see. I will use better lighting to try for a better side picture.
 
Here are a few more pictures. The plastic the tank is made out of makes it difficult to get perfectly clear pictures.

2216959555_76e2dac7ac_o.jpg


2217753690_9c2c075323_o.jpg


2216960093_00d3f8d4b2_o.jpg
 
Going to see the meral spot. Dump it out on several clean paper towels and roll it up cigar style with just the tip of the eyes looking out the end. Then you can hold the animal firmly against the table while you use a pencil to gently push the raptorial appendage aside to look at the meral spot on the upper, inner surface.

Roy
 
I know, the iridescent blue on the maxipellids threw me for a spin though :D and in the first pic the antennae look kinda yellow....

Sorry bought that.

Dan
 
He displayed a bit in the tank, and I saw his meral spots. They are white, and look like they have a slight bit of red around the edges. Does this help? It was too quick for me to get a picture, and I haven't had time to get him out and identify his meral spots per Dr. Roy's suggestion. I will be doing that this evening for confirmation of the meral spot color. He is very feisty! I used a wood skewer to move the sand around a bit in the tank and he aggressively smacked it a few times. He has settled into a tunnel made of PVC that I had laying around.
 
I'm pretty sure it is a Gonodactylellus viridis. This is a common shallow water gonodactylid found in Indonesia and Thailand.

Roy
 
Back
Top