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  • crs water

    i am getting crs tomorrow i have been told the water from the tap isnt good enough for there requirement's. i have been told watermill's or water from lfs. does anybody with experience have advice?

  • #2
    tap water is fine as long as it is dechlorinated properly ask the person your buying from what their water conditions are and try to match that.

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    • #3
      I just got into CRS about two months ago and all I use is tap. I have five berried shrimp so they aren't bothered by it at all.
      210gPetrochromis Macrognatus Green 'Nsumbu
      125g Mdoka White Lip

      "Success is the willingness to fail"

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      • #4
        When I had them I would mix 50/50... de-chlorinated tap and watermill water.
        700g Mini-Monster tank

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        • #5
          I use ozarka bottle water and ph is stable at 6.8 and i have a berried female with in a month
          75g Tank,
          2- Wild Scalare Angel 2-wild Angel snakeskin, 2-half blue half black Angels, 5-Guianacara Geayi, 4- Blue Rams(1m/3f), 1- L144, 1- Pleco unknown type 1-Blue Neon Goby
          2.5g Mini Monter - Shrimp Tank
          10-RCS, 1-Red Sakura 5-Malawa, 8-Boraras Brigittie, 1-Adonis Pleco, 1-Zebra Nerite, 1-Horned Nerite
          10g Tank
          Hospital 2-F. Endlers

          2-29g Empty Tank, 20L Empty Tank , 125g Empty Tank[SIGPIC]sigpic

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          • #6
            I don't think pH bothers the berry up part, it's the hatching and survival rate of shrimplets that the pH has a greater effect on.
            700g Mini-Monster tank

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            • #7
              i have seen parameters online for crs and im sure just like other things it is the "PERFECT CONDITIONS". what parameters have you found success with or are these pretty realistic. my tap water is about 8 ph and gh 150

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              • #8
                Originally posted by eklikewhoa View Post
                I don't think pH bothers the berry up part, it's the hatching and survival rate of shrimplets that the pH has a greater effect on.
                well thats why i am using RO with them.and its only a 3g tankso the water is always stable. and its working for me. i jut have to see how the shrimplets will react to it in a couple of weeks.
                75g Tank,
                2- Wild Scalare Angel 2-wild Angel snakeskin, 2-half blue half black Angels, 5-Guianacara Geayi, 4- Blue Rams(1m/3f), 1- L144, 1- Pleco unknown type 1-Blue Neon Goby
                2.5g Mini Monter - Shrimp Tank
                10-RCS, 1-Red Sakura 5-Malawa, 8-Boraras Brigittie, 1-Adonis Pleco, 1-Zebra Nerite, 1-Horned Nerite
                10g Tank
                Hospital 2-F. Endlers

                2-29g Empty Tank, 20L Empty Tank , 125g Empty Tank[SIGPIC]sigpic

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                • #9
                  I would keep the water slightly acidic.
                  My tapwater is 7.8 out of the tap. They get berried, but are very short lived and I almost never see any babies.
                  I injected CO2 to reduce the pH to 6.7 and their population just exploded. The older ones stopped dying and the babies survive till adulthood.
                  www.ventralfins.com

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                  • #10
                    i believe Ek had mention that indeed CO2 would drop the ph levels but the breeding would slow down because of the chemical inbalance that the co2 was making.
                    75g Tank,
                    2- Wild Scalare Angel 2-wild Angel snakeskin, 2-half blue half black Angels, 5-Guianacara Geayi, 4- Blue Rams(1m/3f), 1- L144, 1- Pleco unknown type 1-Blue Neon Goby
                    2.5g Mini Monter - Shrimp Tank
                    10-RCS, 1-Red Sakura 5-Malawa, 8-Boraras Brigittie, 1-Adonis Pleco, 1-Zebra Nerite, 1-Horned Nerite
                    10g Tank
                    Hospital 2-F. Endlers

                    2-29g Empty Tank, 20L Empty Tank , 125g Empty Tank[SIGPIC]sigpic

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      CO2 doesnt cause an imbalance as long as you buffer your water. If you try CO2 with RO water then your pH will plummet due to the carbon being scavenged. I just experimented with trying to keep neocaridina sp. in aged tap water (pH 7.8-8.0) and the colony is dying. i see no shrimplets surviving at all, as nacra reports. it was suggested to me that high TDS may be the problem as well so i am going back to a 2:1 ratio of watermill:aged tap and IAL until i get my RO setup installed. i would definately look into keeping the pH acidic with substrate, indian almond leaves, or alder cones if you dont want to use CO2. there are a good number of knowledgable shrimp people here, search for posts by armthehomeless, bikeguru, and texsun. there are others too, but i recall that these members have a number of forum posts on the subject.
                      75G Standard - High Light Planted Community Fish
                      28G Aquapod - Medium Light Planted Shrimp & Microrasboras
                      12G Eclipse - Bonsai Planted Betta & Shrimp
                      29G Standard - Vivarium w/ Red Devil Crabs
                      45G Exo-Terra - Terrarium w/ Hermit Crabs (in progress)
                      33G Cubish - Vivarium w/ D.auratus 'blue & bronze'

                      GHAC Member

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                      • #12
                        i have at least 7 berried at the moment, they just got to breeding age, ph is 6.2 (using ro) substrate is brightwell rio escuro xf, gh is 4-5, kh is 0-1, no nitrites, nitrates, ammonia. Its only a 8-9 gallon tank, and so I do water top offs since its a rimless open top tank like once every other day of about half a gallon, and every 3-4 weeks i will let about a gallon evaporate, and then take out another half gallon and put back in 2ish gallons. I use fluval shrimp mineral supplement to get the RO tap water to a gh of 4-5, which seems to be the sweet spot.

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