JC Pollman
Premium Member
I am reasonably confident I still have a couple of mantis shrimp in my tank. I have not seen them, but I hear them all the time. I recently caught one when he exposed himself trying to steal some food and I saw which rock he scurried back to. I dunked his rock into fresh water for 5 minutes, let it sit exposed to the air for 10 minutes, and he finally dragged himself out and died. I am not keen on using this procedure for the rest of the rocks as I believe I will likely kill-off more than just the shrimps.
My question: If these shrimp are so hard for us to exterminate, how come they are not over running the reefs of the world? Something must be controlling their population. Other than octopuses, what else eats them? It seems to me that we should be able to put something in our tanks that will eat these buggers. I have read that some folks have had success with some moray eels, but the success rate does not sound encouraging.
Thoughts?
My question: If these shrimp are so hard for us to exterminate, how come they are not over running the reefs of the world? Something must be controlling their population. Other than octopuses, what else eats them? It seems to me that we should be able to put something in our tanks that will eat these buggers. I have read that some folks have had success with some moray eels, but the success rate does not sound encouraging.
Thoughts?