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Curated catalog

Orange dwarf crayfish (CPO)

Cambarellus patzcuarensis "Orange"

The most popular dwarf crayfish in the hobby: bright orange compact body — the 'CPO' (Cambarellus Patzcuarensis Orange). Native to Mexico (Lake Pátzcuaro). Peaceful for a crayfish but territorial with conspecifics — many hiding spots to avoid clashes during molts. Very easy omnivore. Simple breeding: 20–60 eggs carried for 3–5 weeks. Calcium essential for brilliant orange carapace. Climbs: lid mandatory. Longevity 2 years.

Family
Cambaridae
Origin
Mexiko
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

15 °C - 27 °C

pH

6 - 8

Water type

Freshwater

Ecological role

Scavenger/detritivoro — onnivoro opportunista

Copper

High: copper toxic to all invertebrates

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

Endemic exclusively to the high-altitude, ancient volcanic crater Lake Pátzcuaro in Michoacán, Mexico. Cambarellus patzcuarensis (in its selectively bred "Orange" form, universally celebrated as the CPO - Cambarellus patzcuarensis orange) natively colonizes the cold, intensely oxygenated, heavily structured, and profoundly muddy littoral (shoreline) margins of this high-altitude lake. These specific micro-habitats are completely choked with impenetrable tangles of submerged roots, massive boulders, and dense, completely overwhelming beds of endemic aquatic weeds.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Cambaridae family, it is a spectacular, highly prized, and intensely selectively bred dwarf crayfish. Morphologically, fully mature adults reach a maximum of roughly 3.5 to 4.5 centimeters (1.4-1.8 inches) in length. It possesses a deeply compact, heavily armored, miniature lobster-like exoskeleton. Its absolute defining anatomical feature is its fully functional, remarkably sharp pair of front pincers (chelipeds) which it wields with surprising aggression, constantly raising them in a theatrical threat posture when approached.

Social Behavior:

They are highly intelligent, boldly active, and intensely, ferociously territorial benthic invertebrates. While vasty smaller than standard crayfish, CPOs are remarkably aggressive toward each other and any fish that sleeps on the substrate. They absolutely MUST be given significant space; they establish a rigid, violent pecking order over premium hiding caves. In the aquarium, they possess a fascinating, fearless, and highly active scavenging lifestyle. They spend their entire day boldly marching across the substrate, hunting for food, and aggressively defending their chosen territory from intruders.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is absolute but requires flipping the crayfish over; mature males possess rigid, forward-pointing appendages (gonopods) behind their last pair of walking legs, while females possess a small circular receptacle (annulus ventralis). The coloration of the CPO is breathtaking, completely unnatural in the wild, and the absolute reason for its massive popularity: the entire body, from claws to tail, is deeply saturated with a blinding, glowing, highly opaque neon-orange or deep tangerine. They frequently display two stark, darker orange/red longitudinal stripes down the back.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly accommodate their highly aggressive benthic territoriality. A minimum 60-liter (15-gallon) tank (with a large footprint) is strictly required for a small group (e.g., 1 male, 2 females) to prevent lethal combat. The absolute most critical requirement is overwhelming, massive structural cover; the tank MUST feature dozens of tiny, tight-fitting caves (ceramic tubes, coconut shells) placed far apart to break line-of-sight. Dense thickets of robust plants and complex driftwood tangles are mandatory. A tight-fitting lid is unconditionally mandatory; they will climb airlines to escape.

Diet & Feeding:

They are highly active, deeply voracious, opportunistic omnivores and highly capable ambush predators. In the aquarium, they possess a massive, bottomless appetite. While they constantly scavenge, they strictly MUST be target-fed a heavily meaty diet to prevent them from actively hunting tankmates or cannibalizing each other. Daily offerings of high-quality sinking crustacean pellets, frozen bloodworms, chopped earthworms, and sinking carnivore wafers are absolutely mandatory. They will also eagerly consume blanched vegetables, but protein is critical to suppress their hunting instinct.

Water Quality:

Originating from a high-altitude Mexican lake, they possess highly specific, uncompromising water requirements. They strictly demand COOL, well-oxygenated water (18-24°C / 64-75°F); temperatures above 26°C will rapidly exhaust them and cause premature death. Crucially, they absolutely require hard water (GH 10-18) and a strictly alkaline pH (7.4 - 8.4) to successfully build their rigid orange exoskeletons; keeping them in soft, acidic water is a lethal death sentence. They possess zero tolerance for dissolved organic waste; rigorous weekly water changes are absolutely mandatory.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility requires extreme caution due to their severe territorial aggression and razor-sharp pincers. They are absolutely NOT community-safe for bottom-dwellers. Excellent companions include fast-swimming, top-water schooling fish (like Zebra Danios, Hatchetfish, Guppies). They MUST NEVER be housed with slow-moving, long-finned fish (like Bettas), which will be violently attacked, nor with any bottom-dwelling fish (like Corydoras or Plecos), which will have their eyes or fins clipped. They will actively hunt, catch, and eat dwarf shrimp (like Neocaridina).

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is highly prolific and straightforward in a pristine, heavily structured, cool-water setup. They are direct developers. Triggered by a massive protein diet, the male will violently flip the female over, pin her claws, and mate. The female then retreats to a dark cave, carrying 30-50 dark orange eggs securely under her tail (pleopods) for 3-4 weeks. When they hatch, the babies emerge as perfect, microscopic, fully formed neon-orange crayfish. The tank MUST contain massive amounts of Java Moss, as the highly aggressive adults will actively hunt and cannibalize their own young.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is lethal physical injury (cannibalism) during the molting process; they are completely soft and defenseless after molting, and other CPOs will immediately eat them. Providing dozens of tight, dark hiding caves is unconditionally mandatory. The second major risk is rapid, lethal toxicity; they possess absolute zero tolerance for Copper or chemical fish medications. Finally, keeping them in hot tropical water (above 26°C) or soft, acidic water will lead to catastrophic physiological collapse, failed molting, and rapid death.

Invertebrate profile

Type
Freshwater crayfish
Diet
Onnivoro facilissimo: pellet per invertebrati, wafer di alghe, chironomus, artemia, dafnia, verdure sbollentate. Osso di seppia per calcio
Ecological role
Scavenger/detritivoro — onnivoro opportunista
Minimum group
2
Adult size
5 cm
GH
3 dGH - 25 dGH
KH
1 dKH - 15 dKH
TDS
n/a
Copper
High: copper toxic to all invertebrates
Shock sensitivity
Moderata. Temperatura e pH stabili più importanti dei valori esatti
Calcium and minerals
Calcio essenziale per carapace arancione brillante. Osso di seppia, pellet arricchiti di calcio
Molting
Mute regolari. Molto vulnerabile durante la muta — rifugi essenziali. Esoscheletro mangiato per il calcio
Reproduction
Semplice. Il maschio fissa la femmina. 20–60 uova sotto l'addome per 3–5 settimane. Piccoli autonomi ma vulnerabili — molti rifugi. Adulti possono predare i piccoli.
Compatibility
Pesci veloci di mezzo-acqua (tetra, rasbore, danio). Cautela con gamberetti nani e lumache piccole. Evitare pesci di fondo lenti.

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Cambarellus patzcuarensis "Orange".

Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Cambarellus patzcuarensis "Orange".

Aquarium/live image selected via Openverse. Matched to Cambarellus patzcuarensis "Orange".