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Curated catalog
Black tiger shrimp
Caridina cf. cantonensis "Black Tiger"
The black tiger variant of cantonensis: deep black body with darker vertical stripes — pure elegance. Selectively bred from wild-type Tiger shrimp. Requires soft, acidic, cool water with active substrate and RO water. Genetic selection to intensify the black: doesn't always 'breed true' — requires generational selection. Offspring may vary in intensity. For intermediate-advanced aquarists passionate about shrimp genetics.
- Family
- Atyidae
- Origin
- Deutschland
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
20 °C - 23 °C
6 - 6.8
Freshwater
Algivoro/detritivoro — pascolatore di biofilm
Very high: copper and heavy metals lethal
Description
Geographical Origin & Biotope:
Endemic exclusively to the deeply shaded, intensely cool, highly oxygenated, and perfectly crystal-clear mountain streams and rocky highland tributaries of southern China (specifically the Guangdong province) and Hong Kong. Caridina cf. cantonensis (in its specialized "Black Tiger" mutation) natively colonizes the calm, heavily structured pools behind massive river boulders. These specific micro-habitats are completely characterized by extreme water purity, dense layers of specialized mosses, and massive accumulations of decomposing leaf litter.
Taxonomy & Morphology:
Scientifically classified within the Atyidae family, it is a spectacular, biologically delicate, and highly prized dwarf shrimp. Morphologically, fully mature adults reach a maximum of roughly 2.5 to 3.0 centimeters (1.0-1.2 inches) in length. It possesses a deeply compact, laterally compressed, heavily armored exoskeleton typical of the Caridina genus. The Black Tiger Shrimp is a highly sought-after, selectively bred mutation of the ancestral wild Tiger Shrimp. Its defining anatomical feature is its sharply rounded rostrum (beak) and distinct Tiger patterning.
Social Behavior:
They are highly intelligent, entirely non-aggressive, and deeply communal benthic (bottom-dwelling) invertebrates. They are completely harmless and absolutely MUST be kept in a sizable colony (absolute minimum 10-15 individuals) to establish critical security, disperse shyness, and encourage breeding. In the aquarium, they possess a fascinating, intensely busy, and constant scavenging lifestyle. They spend 100% of their entire day continuously crawling over every square inch of the substrate, specifically focusing on complex moss structures, meticulously picking off microscopic biofilm.
Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:
Sexual dimorphism is subtle but absolute when fully mature; mature females are significantly larger, possess a vastly deeper, more rounded abdomen (to carry eggs, called "berried" females), and frequently display a distinct "saddle" (developing eggs in the ovaries) behind the head. The coloration of the Black Tiger Shrimp is breathtaking: the base body is highly translucent or slightly grayish. This background is spectacularly interrupted by massive, stark, deeply saturated, jet-black vertical "tiger stripes". The highest grades (Black Diamond) are entirely solid jet-black with spectacular golden or orange eyes.
Care and observations
Tank Setup:
The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly, unconditionally replicate a pristine, fiercely cool, and intensely planted Chinese mountain stream. A minimum 30-liter (8-gallon) tank is required for a dedicated colony. The absolute most critical requirement is specialized water buffering; an active, buffering aquatic soil (like ADA Amazonia or specialized shrimp soil) is absolutely, unconditionally mandatory to lock the pH below 6.8. The tank MUST feature massive thickets of fine-leaved plants, specifically dense carpets of aquatic moss (Taiwan Moss, Fissidens), and abundant Indian Almond leaves (Catappa).
Diet & Feeding:
They are highly specialized, continuous scavengers that feed exclusively by meticulously picking microscopic biofilm, algae, and decaying organic matter off surfaces. In the aquarium, their diet MUST be meticulously controlled. While they constantly graze on natural biofilm, they strictly MUST be fed a heavily vegetable-based, high-quality micro-diet. Daily offerings of premium, specialized sinking shrimp pellets (like Shirakura or GlasGarten), powdered bacter-AE (to generate biofilm), and blanched organic vegetables (spinach, nettle leaves) are unconditionally mandatory.
Water Quality:
Originating from pristine mountain streams, Tiger Shrimp are incredibly delicate and possess extreme, uncompromising water requirements. They strictly demand COOL water (20-24°C / 68-75°F); temperatures above 26°C will rapidly suppress their immune system and cause massive die-offs. Crucially, they absolutely require highly soft water (GH 4-7, KH 0-3) and a slightly acidic pH (6.0 - 6.8). They possess absolute zero tolerance for dissolved organic waste; using pure RO/DI water remineralized with specific Tiger Shrimp salts (GH+) is unconditionally mandatory.
Compatibility & Tankmates:
Compatibility is strictly limited by their extreme water parameter requirements, microscopic size, and completely defenseless nature. They are the perfect, spectacular centerpiece for a dedicated, single-species high-grade shrimp biotope. They MUST NEVER be housed with any standard community fish; even small micro-fish will stress them and ruthlessly hunt their microscopic babies. They should strictly be housed alone, or potentially with completely harmless Otocinclus catfish or peaceful snails, though a species-only tank is strongly recommended for breeding.
Aquarium Breeding:
Breeding is highly prolific but only if their extreme water parameters are perfectly, flawlessly maintained. They are direct developers; they do NOT have a larval stage. Triggered by highly stable, cool, acidic water, mature females will carry 20-30 dark eggs under their abdomen for roughly 4-5 weeks. When they hatch, the babies emerge as microscopic, fully formed replicas of the adults. The babies are profoundly delicate; massive tangles of moss and powdered biofilm supplements (like Bacter-AE) are absolutely mandatory to ensure the microscopic babies survive their first molt.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest physical risk is rapid, lethal toxicity; they possess absolute zero tolerance for Copper, heavy metals, or chemical medications. The use of pure RO/DI water remineralized with specific Tiger Shrimp salts is unconditionally mandatory; tap water will kill them. The second major risk is lethal physiological collapse (molting failure) caused by incorrect parameters; keeping them in warm water (above 26°C) or alkaline water (pH above 7.0) will rapidly wipe out the entire colony. Finally, active buffering soil is required to prevent lethal pH swings.
Invertebrate profile
- Type
- Freshwater shrimp
- Diet
- Pascolatore: biofilm, alghe, detrito. Supplemento: pellet premium per gamberetti, spirulina, verdure sbollentate
- Ecological role
- Algivoro/detritivoro — pascolatore di biofilm
- Minimum group
- 6
- Adult size
- 3 cm
- GH
- 4 dGH - 6 dGH
- KH
- 0 dKH - 1 dKH
- TDS
- 100 ppm - 140 ppm
- Copper
- Very high: copper and heavy metals lethal
- Shock sensitivity
- Altissima. Cambi piccoli, acclimatazione a goccia, acqua identica
- Calcium and minerals
- Rimineralizzazione precisa e costante
- Molting
- Mute delicate. Parametri ultra-stabili. Acclimatazione a goccia sempre
- Reproduction
- Sviluppo diretto. ~28–35 giorni. Non sempre breed true — serve selezione. Femmine più grandi con 'sella' visibile.
- Compatibility
- Vasca monospecifica per selezione genetica. Compatibile con lumache.
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Representative live aquarium/natural image from Caridina cf. cantonensis "Red Bee" (same genus) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Caridina cf. cantonensis "Black Tiger".