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InvertebrateFreshwaterDifficult

Curated catalog

Bumblebee shrimp

Caridina cf. breviata "Bumblebee"

The shrimp with bumblebee stripes: alternating white and black/brown bands on the body — unmistakable. A specialized Caridina requiring soft, acidic water with active buffering substrate — the opposite of Neocaridina. Sensitive to fluctuations: active substrate + remineralized RO water mandatory. Can crossbreed with other Caridina cantonensis — species-only tank for purity. Biofilm as primary diet. Delicate molting: 'white ring of death' = parameter shock.

Family
Atyidae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

16 °C - 24 °C

pH

6 - 7

Water type

Freshwater

Ecological role

Algivoro/detritivoro — pascolatore di biofilm

Copper

Very high: copper lethal. Avoid medications and fertilizers with copper

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

The wild-type Caridina cantonensis is endemic to the fast-flowing, highly oxygenated, and pristine mountain streams of southern China (Guangdong province). The "Bumblebee" variety (Caridina cantonensis var. Bumblebee) is one of the oldest, naturally occurring, early cultivated mutations in the dwarf shrimp hobby. They inhabit cool, clearwater rocky streams shaded by dense forest canopies. These environments are fundamentally defined by highly acidic, incredibly soft water flowing briskly over rounded river stones, gravel, and massive accumulations of decaying leaf litter.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Atyidae family, it belongs to the highly complex Caridina cantonensis species group, which also birthed the famous Crystal Red and Bee Shrimp. Taxonomically, it is an early, highly robust color morph, genetically closer to the wild type than modern, heavily inbred Crystal strains. Morphologically, it possesses the classic, delicate dwarf shrimp profile, rarely exceeding 2.5 to 3.0 centimeters in total length. It features specialized, bristle-like chelipeds (claws) designed exclusively for constantly sweeping and scraping biofilm.

Social Behavior:

They are completely peaceful, utterly defenseless, and highly gregarious invertebrate scavengers. They lack any form of aggression and rely entirely on the absolute security of a large colony (minimum 10-15 individuals) and a heavily structured environment. When kept in a secure, predator-free environment, they are constantly active, spending 24 hours a day relentlessly walking over every surface (plants, wood, substrate), furiously picking at microscopic biofilm, algae, and detritus with their specialized sweeping claws.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is distinct upon maturity. Females are significantly larger, possess a vastly deeper, rounder underbelly (the "saddle" area designed for carrying eggs), and often exhibit slightly more vibrant striping. Males are noticeably smaller, sleeker, and more torpedo-shaped. The coloration is the defining feature: the body showcases a striking, alternating banded pattern of thick jet-black (or deep chocolate brown) and opaque white stripes, perfectly resembling the coloration of a bumblebee.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture must flawlessly replicate a highly oxygenated, pristine mountain stream. A minimum 30-liter dedicated nano-tank is required. The absolute most critical element is the substrate: you MUST use a specialized active buffering soil (like ADA Aquasoil) designed to strip carbonates and permanently lock the pH below 6.5. The layout MUST feature extensive tangles of branching spider wood, dense thickets of moss (Java Moss, Fissidens), and a continuous, heavy carpet of Indian Almond leaves to cultivate essential biofilm.

Diet & Feeding:

In their natural mountain streams, they are continuous, obligate detritivores and biofilm grazers. They constantly sweep hard surfaces for microscopic bacteria, fungi, and soft algae. In captivity, a mature tank with heavy leaf litter provides 80% of their diet. This MUST be supplemented 2-3 times a week with specialized, high-quality sinking shrimp pellets, blanched organic vegetables (spinach, nettle leaves, zucchini), and mineral blocks to provide essential calcium for successful molting.

Water Quality:

Originating from pristine Chinese mountain streams, they are strict soft-water specialists and highly demanding regarding water chemistry. They demand cooler water (20-24°C / 68-75°F); temperatures exceeding 26°C are rapidly fatal. They absolutely require remineralized RO (Reverse Osmosis) water to achieve zero KH, a GH of 4-6, and a highly acidic pH (5.5 - 6.5). They have absolute zero tolerance for ammonia, nitrites, and specifically, copper. Filtration MUST be provided by a massive, matured sponge filter to prevent sucking up babies.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is the single greatest challenge in shrimp keeping. Because they are tiny, defenseless, and represent the natural base of the food chain, they MUST ideally be kept in a strict, dedicated species-only setup. If housed with fish, virtually any fish with a mouth large enough will hunt and eat them. The only remotely acceptable tankmates are other tiny, ultra-peaceful herbivores (like Otocinclus catfish) or microscopic micro-rasboras (like Boraras brigittae), though even these may eat newborn shrimplets.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is highly prolific and continuous if water parameters are pristine. They are direct developers (no planktonic larval stage). The female develops a distinct "saddle" of unfertilized eggs behind her head. Upon molting, she releases pheromones, causing males to swim frantically around the tank. Following fertilization, she moves 20-30 eggs to her swimmerets (under her tail), vigorously fanning them for 3-4 weeks. The eggs hatch into perfectly formed, microscopic replicas of the adults that immediately begin grazing on biofilm.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is physiological collapse and failed molting (the "Ring of Death") caused by improper water chemistry (keeping them in hard tap water or using water with zero GH). The second major risk is lethal copper poisoning; even microscopic trace amounts of copper from medications or old tap water pipes will exterminate the entire colony instantly. High temperatures (above 26°C) will rapidly cause bacterial infections and wipe out the tank.

Invertebrate profile

Type
Freshwater shrimp
Diet
Pascolatore: biofilm (dieta primaria), alghe, detrito. Supplemento: pellet per gamberetti 2–3 volte a settimana, verdure sbollentate, foglie di Catappa
Ecological role
Algivoro/detritivoro — pascolatore di biofilm
Minimum group
6
Adult size
2.5 cm
GH
3 dGH - 6 dGH
KH
0 dKH - 1 dKH
TDS
100 ppm - 200 ppm
Copper
Very high: copper lethal. Avoid medications and fertilizers with copper
Shock sensitivity
Altissima. Cambi d'acqua piccoli (10–15%) con acqua identica ai parametri della vasca
Calcium and minerals
Con mineralizzazione specifica Caridina. Esoscheletro fonte di calcio
Molting
Mute delicate. 'Anello bianco della morte' = sbalzo di parametri (GH/KH). Cambi piccoli e costanti
Reproduction
Sviluppo diretto. ~30 uova per ~30 giorni. Parametri stabili = fattore critico. Attenzione: si incrocia con altre Caridina cantonensis.
Compatibility
Vasca monospecifica per purezza genetica. Compatibile con lumache. Evitare pesci e altre Caridina se si desidera mantenere la linea.

Image gallery

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

Representative live aquarium/natural image from Caridina multidentata (same genus) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Caridina cf. breviata "Bumblebee".