If flat they could be planarians.
If round and red tubifex.
If round and white nematodes.
Round and black trout worms.
There are others too.
Most of these (there are many species of nematodes)
are harmless in the typical shrimp tank though there
are some who may debate that.
Unless there's an obvious problem I'm usually thrilled
by biodiversity in my tanks. Something always cleans
up something something else missed.
Lots of times the drastic measures people take to 'fix'
a nonexistent problem upsets the balance and causes
a dieoff pinned on the original innocent bystander.
If tubifex proliferate in one tank I try to figure out why
they aren't doing so in the others.
When feeding they sway back and forth in unison like
miniature versions of some saltwater worms people pay
a lot of money for. Sometimes I watch them more than
the shrimp.
Life is a curse or a blessing, it all depends on how we
look at it as it remains otherwise the same.
Just one person's opionion.
Cheers,
Darrin
To: FreshwaterShrimp@yahoogroups.com
From: stuart@...
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 10:50:36 +0100
Subject: [FreshwaterShrimp] Worms
I believe babyhellcat69 wrote this email section below:
> Heres a question for you.
> Today I noticed worms in my cherry shrimp tank. They are orangish red in
> color and a bit over an inch long. What kind of worms are they?
No idea. Sorry. Can't say I've ever seen red ones in my tanks.
Plenty of white ones.
They're called nematodes.
http://theaquariumwiki.com/Nematodes
Most are harmless.
> Will they harm my shrimps?
No.
> How do I exterminate the worms without harming my shrimp?
You can't.
I think because you're putting in food into your tank you're also feeding
the worms.
Maybe cut back on the amount you feed?
> I really really dont want to have to tear down the tank and
> refill it as I have a ton of newly hatched baby shrimps in there. What
> can I do. I am fishing out the ones I can find but am worried they will
> reproduce before I can get them all out of there. I noticed that on the
> sponge filter there are some tiny little worms also. I worry about my
> shrimp and absolutely HATE ALL WORMS yucky
They are natural and every tank has them.
Best way is to cut back on overfeeding. The worms are a clear sign that you
are overfeeding.
I used to feed an algae tablet into a corner of my shrimp tank as it has 4x
Dwarf Oto fish in it as well.
I noticed this odd looking clump and with my USB microscope I found these:
Hope it's not too gross for you. ;-)
http://mytriops.com/mypics/odd_cluster_of_worms.jpg
As soon as I stopped feeding the algae tablet, they vanished.
I now only feed half a tablet, once a week.
--
Stuart Halliday
http://mytriops.com/
200 Million years in the making...
If round and red tubifex.
If round and white nematodes.
Round and black trout worms.
There are others too.
Most of these (there are many species of nematodes)
are harmless in the typical shrimp tank though there
are some who may debate that.
Unless there's an obvious problem I'm usually thrilled
by biodiversity in my tanks. Something always cleans
up something something else missed.
Lots of times the drastic measures people take to 'fix'
a nonexistent problem upsets the balance and causes
a dieoff pinned on the original innocent bystander.
If tubifex proliferate in one tank I try to figure out why
they aren't doing so in the others.
When feeding they sway back and forth in unison like
miniature versions of some saltwater worms people pay
a lot of money for. Sometimes I watch them more than
the shrimp.
Life is a curse or a blessing, it all depends on how we
look at it as it remains otherwise the same.
Just one person's opionion.
Cheers,
Darrin
To: FreshwaterShrimp@yahoogroups.com
From: stuart@...
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 10:50:36 +0100
Subject: [FreshwaterShrimp] Worms
I believe babyhellcat69 wrote this email section below:
> Heres a question for you.
> Today I noticed worms in my cherry shrimp tank. They are orangish red in
> color and a bit over an inch long. What kind of worms are they?
No idea. Sorry. Can't say I've ever seen red ones in my tanks.
Plenty of white ones.
They're called nematodes.
http://theaquariumw
Most are harmless.
> Will they harm my shrimps?
No.
> How do I exterminate the worms without harming my shrimp?
You can't.
I think because you're putting in food into your tank you're also feeding
the worms.
Maybe cut back on the amount you feed?
> I really really dont want to have to tear down the tank and
> refill it as I have a ton of newly hatched baby shrimps in there. What
> can I do. I am fishing out the ones I can find but am worried they will
> reproduce before I can get them all out of there. I noticed that on the
> sponge filter there are some tiny little worms also. I worry about my
> shrimp and absolutely HATE ALL WORMS yucky
They are natural and every tank has them.
Best way is to cut back on overfeeding. The worms are a clear sign that you
are overfeeding.
I used to feed an algae tablet into a corner of my shrimp tank as it has 4x
Dwarf Oto fish in it as well.
I noticed this odd looking clump and with my USB microscope I found these:
Hope it's not too gross for you. ;-)
http://mytriops.
As soon as I stopped feeding the algae tablet, they vanished.
I now only feed half a tablet, once a week.
--
Stuart Halliday
http://mytriops.
200 Million years in the making...