Back to catalog
InvertebrateFreshwaterDifficult

Curated catalog

Amazon tiger shrimp

Euryrhynchus amazoniensis

The ghost of Amazonian blackwater: rare, shy shrimp native to blackwater streams of the Amazon Basin. Requires ACIDIC water, soft and warm — extreme conditions. Nocturnal/crepuscular, prefers hiding among leaf litter. Species-only tank STRONGLY recommended. Extremely rare commercially and in the hobby. For expert aquarists specializing in Amazonian biotopes.

Family
Palaemonidae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

26 °C - 30 °C

pH

4.5 - 6

Water type

Freshwater

Ecological role

Detritivoro — scavenger notturno

Copper

High: avoid copper

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

Endemic exclusively to the massive, sprawling, slow-moving Amazon River basin spanning Brazil, Peru, and Colombia. Euryrhynchus amazoniensis (often known as the Amazonian Tiger Shrimp or Dwarf Amazon Shrimp) natively colonizes the intensely dark, highly acidic, heavily shaded "blackwater" tributaries, flooded forests (igapó), and deep swamps. These specific micro-habitats are completely characterized by zero water current, extreme water softness, massive tangles of submerged tree roots, and a substrate buried under meters of slowly decomposing botanical matter.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Euryrhynchidae family, it is a spectacular, biologically fascinating, and extremely rare dwarf shrimp in the aquarium hobby. Morphologically, fully mature adults reach a maximum of roughly 1.5 to 2.0 centimeters (0.6-0.8 inches) in length. It possesses a uniquely compact, deeply robust, almost stout body structure entirely distinct from standard Caridina. Its absolute defining, evolutionary signature anatomical features are its massively enlarged, highly robust, pincer-like front claws (chelipeds) that make it resemble a microscopic crayfish or lobster.

Social Behavior:

Despite their aggressive, crayfish-like appearance, they are highly intelligent, surprisingly peaceful, but intensely shy and completely nocturnal benthic invertebrates. They absolutely MUST be kept in small groups (4-6 individuals) to establish critical security; kept alone, they will permanently hide. In the aquarium, they possess a fascinating, slow, and highly deliberate scavenging lifestyle. They will spend 90% of daylight hours deeply hidden inside complex wood or leaf-litter caves, only emerging under complete darkness to meticulously pick off meaty foods.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is subtle but absolute when fully mature; mature males possess significantly larger, vastly more robust, and heavily armored front claws (chelipeds) compared to the females. The coloration of the Amazonian Tiger Shrimp is breathtaking, entirely natural, and designed for extreme blackwater camouflage. The base body is usually a highly translucent, glowing pale blue or violet hue. This delicate background is spectacularly interrupted by stark, deeply saturated dark brown, black, or reddish "tiger stripes" running vertically across the abdomen.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture MUST flawlessly, unconditionally replicate a pristine, heavily shaded, intensely structured Amazonian blackwater swamp. A minimum 40-liter (10-gallon) tank is required. The absolute most critical requirement is overwhelming structural cover: massive tangles of complex branching driftwood, hollow wood caves, and specifically, a very deep layer of decomposing Indian Almond leaves (Catappa), Oak leaves, and botanical seed pods. Aquatic plants are not required, but dense floating plants (like Salvinia) are mandatory to aggressively block all bright light.

Diet & Feeding:

Unlike standard dwarf shrimp (which are detritivores), Euryrhynchus amazoniensis are highly specialized, active micro-predators and carnivores. In the aquarium, their diet MUST be meticulously controlled. They will NOT survive on standard vegetable shrimp pellets. They strictly MUST be fed a heavily protein-based, high-quality meaty diet. Daily offerings of frozen bloodworms, live blackworms, frozen daphnia, brine shrimp, and specialized sinking carnivorous pellets (like high-protein Corydoras sinking wafers) are unconditionally mandatory for their long-term survival.

Water Quality:

Originating from pristine Amazonian blackwater, they are incredibly delicate and possess extreme, uncompromising water requirements. They strictly demand intensely warm tropical heat (26-29°C / 79-84°F); cooler water will rapidly kill them. Crucially, they absolutely require extremely soft water (GH 1-4, KH 0-1) and an intensely acidic, very low pH (5.0 - 6.5) strictly achieved by leaching massive amounts of natural tannins from botanicals. They possess absolute zero tolerance for dissolved organic waste; using pure RO/DI water is unconditionally mandatory.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

Compatibility is strictly limited by their extreme blackwater parameter requirements, microscopic size, and profound, intense timidity. They are the perfect, spectacular centerpiece for a dedicated, single-species Amazon biotope. Despite having claws, they are too small to harm fish. However, they MUST NEVER be housed with any standard community fish; even peaceful fish will outcompete them for food and cause them to hide permanently and starve. They should strictly be housed alone, though peaceful, tiny blackwater micro-fish (like Boraras) are theoretically possible.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is possible but extraordinarily challenging, requiring absolute perfection in their extreme blackwater parameters and massive amounts of live meaty foods. They are direct developers; they do NOT have a larval stage. Triggered by highly stable, hot, deeply acidic water, mature females will carry roughly 10-15 extremely large eggs under their abdomen for 4-5 weeks. When they hatch, the babies emerge as microscopic, fully formed replicas of the adults. The carnivorous babies are profoundly delicate and require massive amounts of live micro-worms to survive.

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 is unconditionally mandatory. The second major risk is lethal physiological collapse caused by incorrect parameters; keeping them in standard hard, alkaline water or temperatures below 25°C will rapidly wipe out the entire colony. Finally, they will easily starve to death in newly established, brightly lit tanks if not directly target-fed with high-protein meaty foods at night.

Invertebrate profile

Type
Freshwater shrimp
Diet
Detritivoro/onnivoro: detrito, biofilm, piccoli alimenti affondanti
Ecological role
Detritivoro — scavenger notturno
Minimum group
6
Adult size
2.5 cm
GH
6 dGH - 10 dGH
KH
n/a
TDS
n/a
Copper
High: avoid copper
Shock sensitivity
Alta
Calcium and minerals
Mineralizzazione minima per acque acide
Molting
Poco documentato
Reproduction
Poco documentata in acquario. Probabilmente sviluppo diretto.
Compatibility
Vasca monospecifica. Timido — evitare pesci, gamberi e altri gamberetti.

Image gallery

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

Exact licensed live observation photo selected from iNaturalist for Euryrhynchus amazoniensis.

Representative live aquarium/natural image from Procambarus clarkii (same catalog section INVERTEBRATE) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Euryrhynchus amazoniensis.